brucha2000, wishing4wings
You have too many rocks at home and people around here are buying them to use for landscaping.
You have too many rocks at home and people around here are buying them to use for landscaping.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
brucha2000, wishing4wings
You have too many rocks at home and people around here are buying them to use for landscaping.
X1000 more! I put it right under plants, no composting needed. The grass just loves it too, we get bright green spots where we've been cleaning out rabbit cage dropping pans.X1000![]()
We don't hesitate in the least to add dog poop, meats, fats etc- or any other organic waste. I understand the concerns and they are well founded; but from my experience as long as your compost is getting HOT, and you give it a good long aging after, there can't be any harm with this. Plus, why send it off to landfills to become methane, when it can become great soil?
I tend to look at it like this- I already know that these materials biodegrade, nature shows us that. The question is why do folks typically recommend that we don't put it in our bins? Rather than accepting a blanket "Don't do it" recommendation, I prefer to look at the concerns with doing it and then see if I can address those concerns in another way. Best I can tell the concerns are the following:I know of people who use pine or newspaper pellet kitty litter and then compost the used litter for TWO years. I haven't tried it, but I am tempted. I do use pine pellets for my cats and chickens. I have never composted dog waste.
I am curious about this. I have a compost pile on the end of my property, that I keep a good mix of things in, but I have major problems with wild critters going after my food scraps. We have wild animals regardless on this property, and they don't bother me, but it seems rather silly to just keep feeding them our food scraps. Besides the scraps I add hay from the tortoise pen, scooped but used cat litter (it's actually chicken crumbles), and leaves and so on.For sure no flies here because I compost right UNDER the roosts and in the rest of the run and the chickens do all the work and eat the flies. I use lots of oak leaves and makes sure to dampen it down during the summer. From time to time I scoop the "harvest compost" out and add more leaves and a few shovels of garden soil. Never ever any odor either.