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Friday

HOW TO MAKE COMPOST FOR LAZY GARDENERS

After I saw how great coffee grounds work on my gardenias, I decided to learn how to make compost in a last ditch effort to save the rest of the landscaping that the previous owner of our home so thoughtfully took care of before she moved. I've read all these tutorials on how to compost and what you should or shouldn't throw in the pile but you see, I'm a really lazy gardener so I have been waiting for a book called "HOW TO COMPOST THE QUICK AND EASY WAY" or "COMPOSTING FOR LAZY PEOPLE" or here's another title I would have snatched off the book shelf "COMPOSTING FOR SLACKERS". You get the idea; I want an instruction manual for bone lazy folks such as myself.

What appeals to me about making compost is that it is a completely natural way to fertilize your shrubs, vegetable garden and flowers. It doesn't cost a penny to make however there is some work involved and that's the part I've been avoiding it all cost preferring to focus on ways to make a green home for my family that took less effort. Having picked most of the easier tasks involved with going green off of my to do list I found myself unavoidably faced with having to tackle learning how to make compost.

Since nobody else had written a book on how lazy folks can compost, I'm going to do it. Here goes nothing!


  1. Compost only in the summer because everything will decompose quicker. This is no problem at all where I live because hundred degree days are pretty common.

  2. Pile 25 parts of brown carbon rich organic material like straw, dried leaves or sawdust to one part nitrogen rich green material like dead plants, grass clippings etc. stirring it all up together very carefully.

  3. it's recommended to shred all the stuff to speed up the composting process which is no problem with the grass clippings as they are already shredded. The instructions that I read recommended that you cut up watermelon rinds and any other big stuff but that's the part I consider to be way too time consuming (read: too much work).

    My solution to this problem is to throw this stuff into a big black plastic garbage bag, put it in hot sunshine until it's cooked and then carefully walk over it crashing the contents before tossing it into the compost pile.

  4. Water your compost pile until it's dampened

  5. Stir the pile weekly



In a very short time you'll have boatloads of the gardener's version of black gold. In fact you may have so much that you will be tainted to share your bounty with your neighbors! But I say unless they came over to help me stir that compost pile they can fend for themselves!

Well, I might give them a bucket full or two, just enough to get them addicted and then maybe I can show them how to make compost and they can have their own compost pile.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

hello. following from blog hop friday. have a great weekend!

stacey @ www.ecomodernmom.com

Jessica B. said...

I'm a day late, but I'm your newest follower from Blog Hop Friday. Would love if you'd vist me at Mom of all Trades! Have a great weekend.

missykade said...

Following from Friday hop, would love to have you follow us back :)

http://lucasjourneyspd.blogspot.com/

Unknown said...

Good post! I was thinking of getting a worm farm, but my compost pile and composter provides enough worms. If not them, I would get the farm. You give very useful information.

Maxabella said...

Thanks for the great composting tutorial. Like you, I would love it but I'm too lazy. Seems easier than I thought. Does it smell at all?