Phew. I don’t think I have any fancy teabags!most tea bags are NOT plastic but some of the ones that are try and look fancy and use 'mesh' etc. Don't buy those. Honestly, loose leaf tea tastes better, is cheaper, and super easy to compost.
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Phew. I don’t think I have any fancy teabags!most tea bags are NOT plastic but some of the ones that are try and look fancy and use 'mesh' etc. Don't buy those. Honestly, loose leaf tea tastes better, is cheaper, and super easy to compost.
Following. As a family of 8, this would be a GREAT way for us to deal with paper and cardboard waste
I'm 8 months in and loving using shreds in the coop! when I shovel out my run onto the garden in the spring, I will put all the shreds from the coop into the run to turn into compost in time for fall turnover.
chicken poop is full of nitrogen! that's how my run is composting so fast. woodchips, dry leaves and months of chicken poop.Sounds like a good plan. Just remember that paper shreds are all carbon, so you will need to add greens, like grass clippings, weeds, etc... into the compost mix to get the process cooking.
We won’t even have our chicks for at least a month, and I already started shredding cardboard and paper in the little 7 sheet shredder I have. I figured I’d use it until it pooped out from the cardboard. Nearly 4 trash bags later, it’s still going.Before I started shredding paper and light cardboard, we used to have maybe 3 or 4 bags of garbage a week. Most of that taken up by bulky paper products. Now that I shred almost all our paper products, we are down to about 2 garbage bags per month.
Additionally, we have a "chicken bucket" (old ice cream pail) that we toss all our kitchen scraps and most leftovers into and feed to the chickens every morning. So, we have very little "wet" garbage in our trash.
I try to reuse or repurpose most of our plastics and metal, but we send about 1 garbage bag full of recycle items to the recycle bin every week.
I did want to ask though, do you or anyone else have experience using shredded paper/cardboard in a brooder? I’m happy to get a brick of pine shavings for the chicks to start out. But if they don’t eat the paper, and it can be used, so much the better.
We won’t even have our chicks for at least a month, and I already started shredding cardboard and paper in the little 7 sheet shredder I have. I figured I’d use it until it pooped out from the cardboard. Nearly 4 trash bags later, it’s still going.
I’ve had success shredding Amazon and single layer corrugated cardboard in mine. It has been a pleasant surpriseI have found that I can shred heavy packing cardboard if I cut it into strips and feed it down the middle of the machine - that is usually also marked for shredding credit cards.
I store mine in empty feed bags but honestly, because I have free nesting materials I like to change out and or freshen up the nest boxes about every 1-3 months- depending on use on box etc, so I only have 2 bags that remain active.How does everyone store their shredded paper and cardboard until they need it?