composting at home

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order by phone 0844 571 4444 or online at www.recycleforgloucestershire.com/composting *Offer applies to 220 and 330 Ltr compost bins. £5.49 delivery charge applies 220 litre Compost bin £15 RRP £39 330 litre Compost bin £18 RRP £49 Buy one get one half price

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A guide to home composting

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Page 1: Composting at home

order by phone 0844 571 4444 or online at www.recycleforgloucestershire.com/composting

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*Offer applies to 220 and 330 Ltr compost bins. £5.49 delivery charge applies

220 litre Compost bin£15

RRP £39

330 litre Compost bin£18

RRP £49

Buy oneget one

half price

Page 2: Composting at home

We offer a full range of compost bins and accessories which are available to purchase online at recycleforgloucestershire.com/composting Products include...

Aunty Rubbish talks composting

Hello everyone, I’ve been composting for the last 30 years. Think of how much waste I’ve transformed into compost over that time!

Gloucestershire County Council has a team of Master Composter volunteers, who could help you with any composting problems. If you would like to get in touch, please email me at [email protected] follow me on twitter and/or facebook

The following items can easily be turned into compost, making your garden greener and reducing the amount of rubbish that is sent to Gloucestershire landfill sites.

Our range of products

Browns. Slow to rot, provide carbon and fibre and allow air pockets to form: Cardboard & egg boxes, Scrunched up paper, fallen leaves & sawdust, twigs, branches & bark.

Keep these out. Certain things should never be placed in your bin:

Meats, fish & cooked foods, dairy products, dog poo or cat litter, perennial weeds or diseased plants.

Greens. Quick to rot and provide

important nitrogen and moisture:

Tea bags, coffee grounds, filter

papers, grass cuttings, raw

vegetable peeling, salad leaves

& fruit scraps, old flowers &

nettles and young annual weeds.

Wormeries Other CompostersWater Butts

www.facebook.com/glosauntyrubbish@auntyrubbish

Page 3: Composting at home

Find the right site.Ideally site your compost bin in a reasonably sunny site on bare soil. Choose a place where you can easily add ingredients to the bin and get the compost out.

Add the right mix.A 50:50 mix of greens and browns is the perfect recipe for compost. Keep a caddy or container in the kitchen to collect everything from vegetable and fruit peelings to teabags, toilet roll tubes, cereal boxes and egg shells before emptying into your bin along with your garden waste.

Wait a while.It takes between nine and twelve months for your compost to become ready for use, don’t forget to mix it occasionally to add air. Once it has become crumbly, dark, resembling thick moist soil and smells earthy it is ready to use.

Use it.Don’t worry if your compost looks a little lumpy with twigs and bits of eggshell - this is normal. Use it to enrich borders and vegetable patches, plant up patio containers or feed the lawn.

www.recycleforgloucestershire.com/composting

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A guide to home composting

Ref: ENV00308 03/11