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This is the sifter I made from 1/4" hardware cloth and lumber scraps. The outer flanges around the bottom fit down over the top edge of the trashcan and secure its position. I fill it with whatever I'm sifting, shake the can back and forth in all directions and the sifted material drops into the can.
The 1/4-inch hardware cloth seems to be about the perfect sized screen for seed starting soil. My mini sifter is a bit smaller because I sift the potting soil into a plastic dish pan in the house. But I like the idea of making a frame to fit over a 5-gallon bucket if you are sifting outside and don't mind a little bit of sifted soil from a square frame over a round bucket.
Of course, I invested money in my cement mixer compost sifter for sifting out my chicken run compost outside. I have different sized wire inserts for sifting out compost. I do have a 1/4-inch hardware cloth insert for fine compost for seed starting. I just had a bad bug problem using my chicken run compost inside the house. Too much natural life in my outdoor compost, I imagine.
That cement mixer compost sifter is a great investment if you need to fill lots of raised beds with fresh compost. It takes little time and almost no labor compared to sifting with a wooden frame and mesh.
I do a lot more gardening now than I did years before. I actually work less due to the cement mixer compost sifter making the ready to use compost and growing everything in pallet wood raised beds where I don't have to bend over all day.
That pallet wood base was a great addition to my setup. I got the drum barrel high enough to put my garden wagons underneath it. Also, I used some reclaimed large lag bolts and washers that I took off some industrial pallets to secure the feet of the cement mixer to the pallets. Now it does not bounce or walk all over the place when running. Very nice for me.
I always drop into Home Depot when I go to town and check out their culled lumber carts. I picked up full sheets of OSB boards that were in perfect condition, but had been used as shelving, so they were selling them for ~80% off the retail price. I have use those culled OSB boards to make the tops of my modular workbenches. Saved a lot of money.
Be warned, since sifting compost is so easy for me now, I have more than doubled my raised bed gardens! And I will probably add another raised bed, or two, this year as well.
As for me, I currently have two composting systems that I use.
I admit, I don't get as excited about the Euro pallets because they don't have the 2X4 stretchers that I need, and use, in my pallet wood raised bed v2.0 builds.
Yeah, I don't think I will use those compressed blocks of wood from the Euro pallets in my gardens. But they do burn good in the barrel for stump removal.
I am still working on different ways to take apart the Euro pallets. I have not yet found a way that works best for me. Having said that, it's only recently that I started picking up Euro pallets because there were no standard pallets available. I like to load up my Explorer on the way home because I pay the same for gas whether or not the back is filled with wood.
Maybe some of our European friends that use those Euro pallets can help with best methods to take them apart?
