How To Make Compost FAST In A TRASH CAN: Turn Trash Into GOLD!
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- čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
- In this video, I share how to make compost fast in a trash can. Making compost can take a long time, and if you use a compost pile, it can be overtaken by weeds and pests and look unsightly. This DIY composting method will make compost faster by 200%, stops all weeds and pests, is hidden from view and can be made in 10 minutes. This composter will turn your kitchen trash into gold!
This $25 trash can composter works as fast as expensive compost tumblers, but without the high cost. After setting up this easy DIY compost system, you'll never use a compost pile or a compost tumbler again! This works especially well at composting kitchen scraps.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
0:00 Making Compost At Home Easier
2:32 How To Make A Trash Can Composter
5:05 What To Compost For Best Results
7:14 Amending Compost With Kitchen Waste
8:32 Incredible Results After 2 Months!
11:23 My Ideal Composting System
13:41 Adventures With Dale
If you have any questions about how to make compost at home, have questions about growing fruit trees or want to know about the things I grow in my raised bed vegetable garden and edible landscaping food forest, are looking for more gardening tips and tricks and garden hacks, have questions about vegetable gardening and organic gardening in general, or want to share some DIY and "how to" garden tips and gardening hacks of your own, please ask in the Comments below!
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#gardening #garden #gardeningtips #compost #composting
If you enjoyed this video, please "Like" and share to help increase its reach! Thanks for watching 😊TIMESTAMPS for convenience:
0:00 Making Compost At Home Easier
2:32 How To Make A Trash Can Composter
5:05 What To Compost For Best Results
7:14 Amending Compost With Kitchen Waste
8:32 Incredible Results After 2 Months!
11:23 My Ideal Composting System
13:41 Adventures With Dale
Please help! I started a composter using that companies instructions. It is a slimy, dripping mess. Can this be saved or do I scrap it ?
@@mimithemultitasker9049 add shredded newpaper and brown cardboard
beAuTiFuL
@@mimithemultitasker9049 that happened to me too. I buried it in my raised bed.
😮
I made one of these compost barrels last year and it works well. In the summer months I put the kitchen scraps in the freezer over night to break down the cell walls in the fruit and veggie scraps before dumping them in the barrel to help speed up the process. I also keep a barrel of shredded leaves next to it so I can add browns on each batch of greens !
Great ideas, thank you.
I lived in North Eastern Pennsylvania. I would just throw worms in it to help them eat faster
Good job!
It is very satisfying to (help) create new soil.
How do you shred leaves?
Shirley Elliott. I have a Troybilt chipper/shredder for that but you can also put dry leaves in a garbage can and use a weedwhacker to stir them up. A lawnmower with a collection bag is probably the easiest way to collect and shred at the same time.
Living in a water scarce place, I usually drill holes into the lid as well and then I turn the lid up side down so that it becomes a rain catchment system draining any rain straight into the bin.
...I do the SAME here in Los Angeles...
Very smart!
❤ Thank You great suggestion ❤
As long as you don't get enough rain that it will rinse the nutrients right out the bottom. You're also allowing more moisture to evaporate right back out and when it's not raining, forcing you to add more water. When I pull dirt out from my compost pile under a dark tarp directly on the ground, it has never been dry. I laugh when I see people season wood like that, face palm.
Great and simple Idea!
The best composter I ever saw was an old hollowed out still rooted tree trunk about 6-7 feet high with no limbs left. There was a hole at the top and one at the bottom. My friend put the scraps in the top and left it. The raw material broke down and then fell down through to the base opening perfectly composted soil ready to go on the garden. Talk about effortless magic!
Yes, need oxygen to complete composing.
Sounds like the top would become a bird feeder.
@@DaDunge the bird would immediately necrote and become compost
As always love your videos and one day of 70 degree warmth like today gets this 70 yr old woman, going again, with outside garden prep and planning. I have a Question: I don't know if you've had this system long enough to answer yet, but my question is, Will those grass seeds in the grass clippings survive to germinate when you use this compost method??? Im fixing to go to Lowes and fix a composting system like yours tomorrow. You are so inspiring!
As long as there is no sunlight
Life Pro Tip: Whenever cutting holes through plastic with either holes saws, or spade bits, in order to safely maintain a clean cut, it's way easier to run the drill backwards. These drills are not made with the expectation of using them on thinner plastics. They tend to grab and torque your wrist, or even the plastic piece quickly turning the situation unsafe. Running the drill backwards will inhibit the grabbing and the bit tends to move through very smooth, leaving a clean hole.
I wish we had read this before ripping through our new bin a few days ago.😢 It kinda looks like some holes were made by a bear.
When I made the bigger holes on the bottom, my drill flew out of my hands, 😂
Your exactly right unless you have an expensive drill it'll probably work a whole lot better...
Great advice
I didn’t know this but ended up doing that way anyway. Seemed easier to make the holes and now I know why. 😅
It's always smart to save some of your well-aged compost (small bucketful) to mix in with any new composting trash can or bin you start. Helps jump start the new batch.
Great tips
adding the dust from your household hover also helps.
Just like one needs preserve a small portion of each sourdough batch; it becomes the starter for the next batch.
Just like making moonshine 🙃
@@jrank3288 I didn’t know that. Now I do.
One thing I do with mine is I picked up a blender from a thrift store and only use it for kitchen scraps. I give them a good blend turning them into a rough slurry and then add them to the compost. It works fantastic.
I have a similar situation, but bc my blender is vintage, it comes in glass n plastic. I use the plastic one for the compost smoothie. I even add in eggshells that have been blended separately for quicker breakdown n decomposition in the compost
I bought a blender from Goodwill just for this purpose, and it works great!
@@supergrover17 *do u dry your egg shells 1st* 🤔
@@my_flippin_journey I mostly get them from friends n they're already completely dried up before I grind it
Because we live in the city, in Central Ontario, we only get about 4-5 mos of good gardening season. I’ve been composting in the soil for years. I use my blender to mulch up all my kitchen scraps (vegetable skins, fruit peels, coffee, egg shells and anything else that comes from the kitchen. I also use grass clippings and leaves. Wherever I have a garden I always design it with about 1-2’ of empty space in the front. As soon as I can work the soil I start digging holes (from left to right or vice versa) in the front of the garden (about 1’ deep) and throw the stuff in. Cover it back up with the dug up soil. I’ve never had any animals disturb the soil and by the time I get back to the 1st hole, the matter is already gone deep into the earth and disappeared. I’ve done this for years and this is the way I expand my garden beds. I always have space in front of my gardens. The following year I mark off another 1-2’ in front of the beds and year after year I can plant in the previous year’s composted earth. Once my gardens are as big as I want, I simply keep trenches in the front and fill them throughout my gardening season and I have new compost to dig up as soon as Spring arrives the following year.
3:40 For structural integrity, I recommend staying off all the reinforcing ridges and only perforate the inner flat pie shapes and center circle.
I had the same thought
Do place som twigs in the bottom when starting the compost.
That will make drainage and provide more oxygen into the bottom.
A couple shovels of native dirt would help add beneficial microbes as well to start the decomposition process
I can’t believe I didn’t see this. Excellent idea. My grandpa kept a worm bed outside the back door at their home. He used the worms for fishing and granma used the castings for her flowers… the good old days…
Thanks for the reminder and such a good idea.❤️
The gold old fashioned Days of Real Life!
I did exactly the same thing for the first time a couple months ago. Wasn't sure what I would get. I didn't have the money for an expensive compost bin so I grabbed one of my plastc cans with a locking lid. Wow was I surprised when it turned out so good! The only difference I do is add the clean out from my chicken pen also I bought some night crawlers and threw them in there. (husband wasn't real happy wasting good fishing worms)
@@lynncampbell6237 You're not Wasting good fishing worms, . . . you're BREEDING them!
I do that to. The older worms can be used for fishing or feeding chickens. Never take the small ones because they double every 90 days
I started training my worms. Lol.
I enjoy your videos and have learned a lot. I am a new gardener at the age of 81 and enjoy your clear instructions. I also love to see your dog wondering around and his own video segments.
GOOD for you on Many levels !
I made smaller versions of this design using 5 gallon food grade buckets. I placed them directly into my raised garden beds. They are covered with bird baths (I used very large ceramic plates I found at 2nd hand shops). It works very well :)
That is a great idea! More manageable for me at that size and I like that it is food grade. Thanks!
Clever!
Love that idea! Thanks for sharing 🎉
Sitting in my living room with a 55 gallon blue barrel wondering if i can use this big🍑 barrel for the sale project
Did you drill holes on the bottom and sides? Or was the space between the ceramic plate and plastic bucket enough to let oxygen in?
My composter is one of those 55 gallon barrels it looks like you have used for rain barrels. My tip for you is to get yourself a garden fork with a "D" handle to use for "stirring" your compost - works great! You can plunge it to the bottom of your mix and the "D" handle makes it easier to twist it once the tines are in the compost. Happy composting!
Great tip!
I use the fork method also. Works well in my compost bin and leaf cage.
I love my D handle fork and have had to “turn turn turn” quite often. 😅
Yep, A small hand rake works wonders.
One question do i keep the self made compost barrel in shade or sunlight? Please reply
I use red worms that I got at a fish bait store. They love the composter. I also use a mini-version of your trash can with 5 gal buckets with a ring of 1/2 inch holes about 2 inches up from the bottom. These are filled to the holes with worm bedding (your choice). Then worms are added and compost ingredients as available. The bucket is buried up to the bucket handle in my raised beds. This setup is a wicking worm composter. Water stays in the bottom and wicks up keeping the compost moist. When watering the raised bed I fill the bucket for 2 minutes to add 5 gallons of water to the bed at that point. Excess water goes out the holes carrying the compost juice with it. My raised beds are 4 x 8, 8 inches high. There are 9 of them.
Hi I am very interested in this idea with the 5 gal buckets. Do you cover them or just leave open. Many thanks
@@brendalewis4351 The buckets are covered with lids. Small holles in the lids allow rain water to drain into the bucket. A rock on the lid keeps it in place. I am still testing this.
@@andrewsjpUTube
Hi there
Do you have a video up on this or pictures?
Thank you
That's sounds awesome! I would love to see a pic
@@HESEDNMERCY Not yet. As I said, I am still testing this. I guess I should make a vidoe of my take out and breakdown of my first one. That is coming up. Here is another thing, I use two buckets in each 4 x 8 bed, centered in the two 4 x 4 ends. These have holes in the bottom to water from below. Filling a bucket with 5 gallons of water is equivalent to 1 inch of rain on the 4 x 4 area. The holes are small so the bucket can fill and leak water slowly. Makes watering easy. Just run the water hose flat out and fill the buket, then move on. Buckets are open with no covers.
Congratulations! You did a great job. I had the same frustration with expensive (and small) compost systems and made two similar compost "cans". Yours is working great. I did mine a little differently, which may be of interest. I made smaller holes (to keep rodents out) on the bottom and sides and keep my cans up top of a single ring of bricks. I chop everything small and even add torn cardboard or plain paper. I add water as needed to keep the mixture moist. To speed decomposition, I attach a bungee cord over the top and roll the cans around on their sides to mix everything when I add new materials. Then I replace them on the bricks. From a nearby creek, I collected a small pail of soil around the creek edge and split that between my two cans. Both my cans are star performers just crawling with worms and other decomposers. They've lasted five years and continue to cook compost well. As you proved, they're much faster than cold composting methods and produce wonderful black gold. Great experiment and the locking cans are genius!
How do you get the worms into your composter if it is off the ground?
@@johannapearse1709 It's no problem at all. There are holes in the bottom of the composter and all around the sides. Typically I include a bucket of compost from an existing can when I set up a new bin. That has some worms and their eggs and they proliferate well. I've never ordered or purchased worms, but my compost is rich with them. Build it and they will come!
I use the “Lasagna” method.
❤
I’ve been doing this for years. Until I saw this video, I thought I was the only one making compost in a trash can. It works well and it’s inexpensive. I have three, as one fills up I start filling another one.
How far up the trash can do you recommend filling it? Thank you!
@@bethdabruzzo7112I'm interested in the answer to that too!
I just put waste directly onto the grass and let it decompose naturally. Is this ok? Isn’t this how the forest floor works? I figure if it works in nature it should work here. It seems you all over think it
One question do i keep the self made compost barrel in shade or sunlight? Please reply
I love your compost bin and have now made a miniature version. I use empty plastic planting pots (the ones that you buy plants in 6inch ) and I simply place them on the soil around my garden where I want to plant something, put some mulch around it, fill with fresh kitchen scraps and a hand full of soil over the top (this stops my doggies from investigating) then cover with another slightly larger pot over the top. It has become such a worm magnet and very easy to rotate to new locations. I also water it in with some compost tea. P.S. I have very heavy black clay and no longer need to add clay breaker to my soil. I also place them between my existing vegies put weeds and spoiled veg into them. Happy gardening 🌻
Have 4 going all the time. Has worked for me for years. I find cans at Walmart even less expensive. I don't put large holes in the bottom. I turn them on their edge to spin contents
Do you put any holes on the bottom?
I started one this year with a large plastic tub. I put a lot of small holes on the bottom. I also put some on the sides. I didn't put any on top so I can control how much water gets in. How big were your holes, and where did you place them?
Same here. Been doing this for 2 yrs now after researching how expensive composter bins are, figured all I need are 32 gallons trash cans. Holes I made are significantly smaller, maybe 1" at best. Compost full of worms and all sorts of beautiful little friends.
Smart. And easier. I’d even step up the cheap and get these at thrift stores.
I so this too, cans from Walmart, easy and neat
Uz no
I purchased a cold compost bin and upon receiving it I realized it was basically a bottomless, sturdy trash can. I didn't really appreciate why there was no bottom at first, but when it came time to use the compost I realized the point. When the compost is mostly finished, I simply move the bin and start anew. Your idea is great, but you'll save yourself a lot of back strain by simply cutting out the bottom entirely. Also, I went to the fishing section and bought live bait worms for just a few dollars and tossed them in there. I thought I might have to do that periodically l, but they've survived 2 years now replacing themselves naturally.
Live bait worms are usually night crawlers which are deep diggers red wigglers are the ones who live near the surface and break down leaves and rotten material
Lucky worms!
I got one of those and the rats loved it. Eek!
In England the old gardeners traditionally pee on the compost heap. I think the.ammonia adds a little je me sais quoi
Made one a month ago and the results have been impressive. Thanks for being a garden guy who DOESN’T lie about hacks. Keep up the stellar work.
Beginner gardener in Florida here and I love these videos. They're so helpful and the ideas I get both from the videos and the comments are amazing.
I’m so glad I happened upon your site. Your videos are so educational and informative. You explain and many times with pics. I’m a visual learner and results oriented for the most part so I’m learning a lot from you. I like the fact you mention at beginning “where you’re gardening and the time of year”!! Thank you so much!!
I made a hot compost in Michigan right on the top of my grass just before winter with small chopped up pieces and would turn it every few days- it got so hot it made ashes and smoked off the snow on top-
3 weeks later it is was beautiful black dirt smelling gold!
I LOVE THIS PROCESS!!!! IT'S SO MUCH FUN
As long as outdoor temperatures peak at around 84f then I can hit 164f easy. I usually don't add any water & then apply the baked clippings as mulch.
@@SlackerU that is a crazy temp! The chemistry of this simple process is amazing to me, and didn't know it could get up that high- thanks for the post Bob!👍
@@SlackerU Wow! Our summers (SoCal only 16 miles inland) have been hitting 100° for a week or two for the last couple of summers, so I can only imagine the temp inside the barrel! That would probably boil off any water I add, or burst into flame! I think I’d have to watch it pretty carefully, or roll it into the shade in the summer. Any tips?
@@kgs2280 It doesn't get hot in the barrel at all. The biomass is too tiny to produce any heat. You need a minimum of 3ftx3ftx3ft to have enough bacteria moving around to warm things up.
First time gardening and I gotta say this video + comment section alone is a huge head start. Subscribed! Thank you and viewers so much!
I follow your instructions about to months ago and wow, this is amazing compared to the open compost I had. Sent the video to my brother since he just started gardening this year. He is going to do it too after hearing the results.
When doing food prep I take a minute or so at the end to slice and dice the scraps before throwing into the metal kitchen compost bucket; giving it a good shake or two mixes the contents. The increased surface area allows much faster onset of action by the composting microorganisms. The bucket commonly is warming from the compost process by the time a few days later when I empty it into the outdoor composter. Finally, you can see that eggshells take FOREVER to break down. I rinse, then dry on a paper towel in the microwave for 30-60 seconds. Shells are then loosely crushed into a quart ziplock bag. When the bag is full, the shells are run through a spice grinder for 10-15 seconds. The powdered endproduct rapidly incorporates into the compost.
An alternative to the microwave that we use is placing the shells on a cookie sheet and setting them in the oven (off) while it’s cooling down after being used to cook something else.
Great for composting and as pure calcium for tomato plants. Win, win!
I have four set up. One is placed under a sapodilla tree and it produces year round with sizable fruit. Also, I have placed a couple close to heavy feeders like bananas and papayas. I used drill bits to place holes on the bottom and sides. The size holes you made would only invite rodents into my bins. The trees and plants send their roots into them and practically slurp up the nutrients.
Yes it’s very cost effective and you can move it to different locations if needed.
I reallllyyyy appreciate you sharing this way of composting, I was gonna build the pallet box type then found yer video again , got my 32 gal can all set up with las yrs garden dirt mix of black cow compost , peat , black dirt & bone meal , I added the lil twigs , leaves , pine needles & kitchen compost scraps today , gave it a good mixing , by mid to late April I kno its gonna be as good as miracle grow if not better Thank you so much , Happy Gardening y'all 🍃🍅🍆🍓🥬🍋🫐🥒🥔🍈🍉🥭🍇
Wow! I am so inspired! I am teaching environmental science for the first time this year. we have a waste unit. After researching for my lessons, I found your video. I started my compost collecting last week and now that I found your video, I am going to make my bin. Thank you!!
Nice job! I find that a 2-bin system is key. One to collect while the other is working. I essentially do the same as you, but with larger pallet bins because I have a massive amount of leaves every autumn. I simply layer mine as I fill it, no manual mixing. Just add water periodically. It's completely broken down by the following autumn when it gets spread on the garden. Lather. Rinse. Repeat.
The 2nd bin….? Does it need any holes? How should the 2nd bin be prepped?
I made this a few years ago, and you're right! Black fluffy soil with an orange peel scent was the result I got! This works!!
We have two compost bins like this in our backyard. We did place a pvc pipe with drilled holes in the middle so everything can aerate better. This method works great!! 👍🏽 I love having a compost bin!!
I'm amazed by how awesome everything composted so far! Best part is nothing stunk! I added the full bin into my pile and it's fabulous!
THANK YOU!!!!
I don’t comment very often, but I think it’s a brilliant idea and I will definitely give it a try. I also read some of your viewer’s comments below. They do have some good feedback that I’m going to implement to my future Black Gold. Thanks.
CZcams is a wealth of info. Social media that actually teaches you good stuff! 😂 I’m glad you enjoyed the video, and thank you for the comment!
I started doing that early last year. I'm up to 3 trash cans now. It's awesome. If u use a garden fork to turn it from time to time you can get a fast turn around also
I’m going to have to invest in a pitchfork or some turning tool.
@@TheMillennialGardener Just roll your can on it's side. Cheaper method... use large black construction garbage bags, add ingredients, moisten, tie top closed, punch small holes in the sides, occasionally roll bag to mix it.
Thxs will do the compactor trash bags until I can afford the $25 trash can!
@@TheMillennialGardener a hoe if u have one
@@TheMillennialGardener You can turn them on their sides and roll the whole can around a few times to mix everything well.
Excelllent demo and instruction on important information for all gardeners. I live in same region and have enjoyed all your podcasts. I appreciate the way you simplify scientific principles for easy application by new and experienced gardeners alike.
Thank you so much for sharing this! I’ve been working on my yard/garden for 3 years now as a renter and the dirt is awful! I’m constantly spending so much money to add the nutrients that my plants need. I’m going to make one of these this weekend with my son!
I bet one way to make it even better would be to take a small PVC pipe with holes drilled or piece of chicken wire and add it right in the center to increase aeration. Like one of those bio reactor ideas, except in a trash can.
Awesome video
That's exactly what I did with my trash can composters. 4" pipe with 1/2 holes. Seems to have improved the system.
Sounds similar to a Johnson-Su reactor. Cool ideas.
I gave up on composting and tried David the good fetid swamp water barrel I throw all my compostible material in it and some water I use the water to water my garden and I've tripled my garden output I originally saw David the good fetid swamp water barrel while watching Black gumbo he made one giving credit to the designer nice thing is I have
Is the pipe placed vertically or horizontally? I’m assuming vertically, but I know nothing about bio reactors, or reactors of any kind.
You assume correctly 😊
Great idea, this looks much more economical than the expensive tumblers and such that are purpose built. Might have to give this a try! I've been using hardware cloth as a compost bin and it works alright but drys out quickly
I just started my own composting experiment with a garbage can just like that one & I my compost is now at about the same place that yours is at in this video.
Like yourself, I have decided to get a second container so I can give the current compost time to finish doing its’ thing.
Thanks for your video, it was very reassuring & now I know how to keep this system working successfully.
Finally I find a video about how to do it in a bin, cause everybody making piles in the yard and it looks awful I didn't wanna do it that way.. I'm glad I found your video.. Thank you!
Going to lowes this week!! Going to make a 4 can system for my 3 raised beds and pots. Thanks for the great info!!
Great idea for small yards and gardens. I use a compost pile and a tarp. In a 10x10 area. I cover the compost with a tarp after hosing down with water to generate heat. Occasionally I take the tarp off and let the chickens turn the compost for me. I pitch fork it back into a pile. Then water and recover with tarp to generate heat. I have three of these piles around the yard and rotate the fresh compost amongst them.
I’m surrounded by a literal forest with leaf and pine needle fall with frequent branches of all sizes. Most of us around here do controlled burns to clear land for planting. This leaves potash and calcium to be tilled in. When I have large piles to burn I collect them to be sifted - take a comfortable section of 1/4” metal fencing, a large collection bucket or small kid’s pool (I use a black cement mixing trough), place the fencing over your bucket, scoop a good amount of burned matter onto it, then shake the ash through until only debris is left. You can remove nails, plastic, anything that won’t burn then start over. Add this natural potash to your compost and you won’t have to add the chemical form. This is great for tomatoes and cukes.
It’s crazy that I was just thinking about this and had not verbally said anything about making a composter at home and your video popped up in my feed :/
I started a couple of these a few weeks ago but added a central vent/chimney (pvc pipe with holes) instead of the side holes, more a miniature johnson Su reactor, hopefully retains more heat while allowing air in. I found drilling holes has a tendancy to crack or cause weakness but melting holes with a soldering iron retains the strength.
Can you share a picture
Good info, did you make a video
Can you share a picture?
I think this a good way to go. One thing that can help with that with the holes in the outside is a thin garden fabric around the inside of the can. With both the central air and the holes in the side you will get a ton of air. 1 to 2 ft is about how far the air penetrates though so in a yeah can size it wouldn't be too bad using either one.
@@carmengubb6454 YT won't allow pics to be added.
Been doing a version of this for years. When the first garbage can gets full I turn it into the second can. The aeration helps speed things up a little.
I’ll make at least 5 of these right now. I have a huge amount of trees on my property and I believe it’s about time to compost of those leaves piles. Thank you for the demo!👍
Excellent tutorial. Have been composting kitchen scraps for years. Going to change over my old method to yours forthwith and save myself a good amount of labor. Thankee.
I have the same exact trash can compost bin! I thought I was just being cheap as I refused to spend $100 on a compost tumbler when I figured I can just turn it myself with a shovel/corkscrew. Works great until it gets full! Now it's time to buy a second!
great idea for a starter composter or as a set up for more than one. I personally have two (an open air for yard waste and a closed barrel for food scraps) and I will look at adding a trash bin to the mix because compost barrels are expensive. The key to the open air is turning it, to help with the breakdown and to turn any weeds or volunteer seeds back into the compost. Also, egg shells will take years to break down due to the fact the main mineral is calcium. If you don't mind the look of eggshells in your garden, then leave them as is, but I grind my dried shells to powder or granules before adding to the compost. Another tip is to buy red worms from walmart or outdoor store - you will find them in the fishing section and you can toss them in the compost - or directly into your garden. I toss what I don't use for fishing into my gardens and compost.
Love the easy maintenance aspect! Your videos never disappoint - great info, great presentation. Thank you.
Wow that works better than my commercial compost round, it take about 2 - 3 years to get to the composting dirt for gardening. Thank you for the quick and easy composting.
You're welcome! It really is a fast method.
I love your videos. You provide wonderful information and explain everything with informative details. I love that there is no background music. Thank you for helping me grow a successful food garden.
Thank you! I'm glad to hear the videos are helpful. I try to edit these down as much as possible so they don't drag on with "stream of consciousness" type discussions 😀
YES! Thank you, thank you for not piping in a bunch of music. It's generally distracting, and you have such a great, clear presentation that we can hear and absorb best without music!
I've got to try this out! I've been cold composting in 2 plastic compost bins (the ones you put together with 4 sides and a lid.) I've been fine with it except it's taking too long and I've run out of room. I was considering buying one more but hesitated since they are now almost double what I bought for a Sam's 5-10 years ago.
Thank you thank you thank you!
I have a cold pile of stuff composting as well...but it looks awful.
Your system is ingenious!!! And doable and sanitary. I'm so glad I stumbled upon you.
I am following all of your steps on this to the letter, got the bin, drilled all the holes! Today is day one of my 64 day project plenty of green and brown stuff 😊 I will take look every 10 days👍🏿
Remember shredded newspaper and any other paper products can be put in your compost as browns. The smaller you can make them the faster they will decompose. Also, pine needles will take quite a while to break down. Happy composting!
That’s what I do with my junk mail and old pizza boxes. I’d rather turn them into dirt than send them to the landfill.
Yeah, earthworms love cardboard.
And egg carton made of fiber, paper from Amazon boxes, toilet paper and paper towels rolls. I also shred junk mail except colored or glossy.
At first, when I learned worms LOVE cardboard and paper, I thought, “Wild!” Then it dawned on me. 🙄 They are made from trees. Of course they love it. 🤣
Soak them first before shredding with bare hands.
I have done a similar set-up and one thing to keep in mind is to not put too much green on the bottom of the bin or else it can become anerobic and mucky. If you're rolling the bin it probably will help mix better, but if you're turning with a fork or shovel, it can be hard to reach the bottom to aerate and make sure it stays aerobic.
Best explained video I've seen to make a composting bin. Many thanks for your time and effort.
Cover those holes with wire mesh or rats will think its a restaurant.
Use mesh no larger than a dime If a dime will fit inside a square, a mouse will fit inside a mesh square ... and then go into your bin and eat all your worms, larvae, and edible food ... and contaminate it with feces and urine too. I use hardware cloth (which is of steel) for rhe bottom and top holes and mesh tape for the small vent holes in the sides.
Thanks! Not only is this a fantastic way to fast compost, but works well in limited small spaces. I’m going to definitely be doing a few of these.
Thank you so much for your support and generosity! I really appreciate it ❤ I'm glad you enjoyed the video.
Thank you for donating to the channel. Viewers like you help me find valuable content to use! How sweeeeeet!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I have a tumbler composter which is awesome but I need more compost and not willing to pay so much again, so your idea will be perfect for me! Thank you!
I tear up all my old paper and cardboard into little bits since I don’t get much brown/dry material in my garden. Works well!
Thank you for posting this video. I was looking for a very simple composting video. And this was perfect. There are so many complicated videos out there.
I don't garden currently because I don't live on a Homestead but this is fun stuff to watch! Thank you for your hard work on these videos!
This was an EXCELLENT video. One of the most educational I've found on this composting method! Thank you!
I've simply got a large pile in the back corner. It started out mid summer with grass clippings, 'browns' and food scraps.
Since then I've added the soil from my potted plants and even the mostly broken down straw bale I grew in from last year.
Each time I water and turn the pile, it's filled with a wide variety of worm sizes.
My goal is to avoid buying ANY bagged soil this next spring.
That’s how my grandparents did it. It never smelled or anything. 🤷🏽♀️ it was a huge yard so I guess that makes a difference. I don’t mind a pile but my partner doesn’t like the look of that
@@ariannagonzalez2618 Grandparents simply knew. They learned it from their parents and grandparents.
I've been spending the last few years learning everything I can about how our grandparents survived. From canning to dry curing meats like bacon. Baking, soap making, etc. Everything I can think of.
_I have a feeling we're going to need those skills very soon!_
Here in Maine I occasionally use a manual ice auger to bring the bottom soil to the top.
I just saw this in November. I have two of these cans in my years collecting dust due to being given totes from the town. Thank you!
I made the same compost bin a few years ago and it's perfect. I just made a banana circle in my yard and filled the hole with my compost. I put the same ingredients in my compost. I have a small shovel that I use to stir the bin every time I add new stuff.
Thanks so much! I haven’t been composting due to rat issues and this looks like a great solution.
Rats will tunnel into those big holes on the bottom. Look at the size of holes on purchased pots-much much smaller and worms get in no problem.
I made my first compost using a tote. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and skills. I will use another tote to start another compost bin. Your advice and experiments are great! I'm grateful 🙏🏾 thank you! ❤❤😊 Baton Rouge Louisiana USA 14:10
"THE BIG EASY"👊🏾👊🏾 (New Jersey)..
I am going to make one this weekend. Props for mixing the compost without wearing gloves.
Yep, an excellent way of making compost in your average backyard.
I start things off in a small compost tumbler that I got free off the side of the road for about 3 weeks (it's lost heat usually by then)
then put that in the trashcan composter. I have 2 trashcan style composters and I basically empty the oldest when the other is close to full,
sift those contents and put any non decomposed stuff back in the original trashcan.
The sifted stuff I store in a plastic drum with airholes until I need to use it. It's a great way to make compost in a limited space.
Such big holes in the bottom would allow gophers, moles, shrews to get in. Worms would be fine with tiny holes & more of them. Also, leaving the can loose would allow you to roll it to mix the compost & eventually get it over to the garden bed where you want to use it. My best ever compost bin was concrete blocks stacked 3 high to make a 3-sided square, with old window screens on the top & front. Bottom was just dirt, but I had no underground varmints in that location.
Agree about smaller holes, I live in Palm Springs where we get lots of rats. They will chew a 1” hole into a 2” hole to get inside.
@@jamesbabb1608 would they be able to tunnel in if it's partly buried?
Wouldn't all those vermin be able to get into a standard compost pile anyways?
I have 3 beat up plastic cans that contain layers of leaves, kitchen scraps, and late stage compost from an open pile. I layer green and brown material as I go. Come spring, I rake off wet leaves that cover my planting beds and add them to my open pile and the cans. Grass clipping start in May. I don’t make a big deal about working it, just little bits every day.
I absolutely love the cinder brick idea. Then with the screens that's wonderful. I have a question though I live in Arizona would I need to add water to my compost whether I use the can or the cinder bricks?
About to start a bokashi system and bought 2 large bins to do this outside for the second part of the composting system. Love that it's so easy.
I appreciate the conversion to metric! So much easier to follow for me, thank you!
I really appreciate your demonstration of the trash can composter. The video is really well done and I'm aware of how patient you had to be to wait until you had your final results.
I have two of these trash cans side by side. This way, I can continue to fill one while the other composter can remain undisturbed while processing into a more finished product. I haven't sunk them into the ground with the large access holes, and I think that innovation reflects a lot of insight.
That is *exactly* what I want to do. I'm going to buy a second trash can for that exact setup. My brain tells me sinking it into the ground is a good move to let worms get in. I can't say it won't work without doing it, but it's worth a shot.
Like a worm-breeder in the garden.
Once it is full and you keep about a quart of moisture added a week especially when it's hot outside you will have it in 60 to 90 days depending on the type of compost you added to it
You can add some
Bagged compost dirt to it to get beneficial bacteria or some from a neighbor or your other compost
@@honkythebastard4746 oh I like that idea.
Dude, I'm impressed with your video! Very articulate and respectful, the idea is so needed these days, thanks for the hard work, cool video!
Thank you! I try to storyboard and edit these as best as I can. I'm just an amateur editor 😄
@@TheMillennialGardener You really are a great teacher. Thanks for your hard work!
Great idea. I think I'm going to try it. Glad to see you got such good response from this video!
Made mine as per these instructions about 3 weeks ago. already seeing results. I turn it every several days. Cant wait to use it. Please do a follow up
We are absolutely going to do this! Thanks for sharing, man.
Fun video.
I'm in Wisconsin so it's quite a bit colder here. We've always struggled figuring out what to do with kitchen scraps during the long winter. The drum composter that we've been using during the summer freezes and we can't open the sliding door. I started using a trash can on our front porch, which is south facing so it stays as warm as possible. With any luck I won't fill it up completely and once spring hits, I can dump it all our into my surface level piles, which I'm planning on starting this year.
I love this shit!
I’m planning on using this method when we move into our home. Thanks for sharing ❤️
Thank you for posting! I have two of these in our backyard along with a smaller spinning tumbler.
Love this! So creative and brilliant!
What a brilliantly simple and affordable idea! Love it! Couldn't do a compost of food scraps in our yard due to my little foraging beagle (who'll eat anything including rocks!) from getting into it. Using wood or other materials to wall it in doesn't keep critters from getting in. Also a pain to build a totally enclosed one and my husband is a cheapo. This is such a super easy solution! Thank you!
Keyword AFFORDABLE...
Try a bungee cord from one handle to the other. We have to do this on garbage cans to keep raccoons out. Then attach another bungee cord from one handle or through the first bungee cord to the fence or wall so they can't knock the can over and work at the lid.
Best compost advice EVER! Thank you.
Thanks for the information on composting. I have wanted to do one for a while. This makes it easy.
Hi, I am using a perforated laundry basket for composting and I have it set up straight into the dirt, 2/3 down in the raised garden. Works like a charm. We are in Fort Mill, SC
That’s using your head! Er, your old laundry basket, I mean!
I love this MG! Thank you so much! I’m definitely gonna try this! 😊👍
You're welcome! I'm glad you found it helpful! It's working well so far.
Great video. I really like the fact that you showed the end result. I think I just came up with a new composting plan.
Really enjoy your informative videos. I always switch off the ‘slow talkers’ that feel they must give me their life history before getting on topic. I appreciate your concise info and actual ‘how to’ demos showing the tools you use. Keep up the good work, I’m determined to have a successful compost system. Trying this one tomorrow 👍
So interesting. I did the same thing with slightly smaller holes in can bottom and did not sink in ground ( great idea)! It was even the same trash can from lowes. Hoping mine looks that good in a month as I am expanding my garden and need to top with compost. Am new to vegetable gardening and appreciate your content. Btw, really surprised how much breakdown you got when it was so cold.
I got an email with reply that I was the daily winner and to reply on telegram. I am not familiar with that app but it looks like I need a phone number to respond. Is that legit or just clickbait?
@@dawnmuller8987 probably click bait. I am seeing a lot of that. Scammers. Look at their account it probably has no videos or content. Then report them as Scams because that will help cut down on these.
It's 0 degrees Celsius here so no grass clippings yet. Been wondering how to do this for years. I just made compost piles around the yard that never really did much of anything. Thank you for doing this video. I forgot to sub earlier but just did now.
I'm from Northern Ontario in Canada, and I've just found your channel. This is a splendid video as I am wanting to make a composter as well. I look forward to applying your techniques this upcoming spring.
Great idea, definitely going to try this, thanks
I've been doing this method for 3+ years. I have soldier flies that help me make my compost in the wamer months.😃 I take a scoop of warm casting from the yard and add them to my compost bin. The eggs hatch and I have even worms to help make the compost.😃
Dale did good over the holidays...doesn't look like he put on any added pounds.😃 He's so cute!🐕
Do you find those soldier flies/maggots disappear once the compost has matured to where it’s useable?
@@getwheeler I learned the hard way to spread it out on the ground for a few days before using it. The first time I mixed it into my planting area and planted peas. The next day I came out and saw these strange white beads on the soil...looking closer they were moving! The larva were eating the inside of the pea seeds! 👀
From then on I found if I spread the compost on the ground for a few days none are left alive in it. 🙂
simple words , clear english , good explanation method thx very much
Absolute GOLD, best, easiest video with exactly the right amount of detail, to watch ...... I'm an 'almost' 60yr old pensioner that lives on my own, & in & hotty sunny SA ...
I ❤ to eat my own home grown foods & smoke my own green 🌿, so finding this vid of urs today, was absolutely fantastic, no more searching for the right youtube vid. 😊 Thank U
You're welcome! I'm glad it was helpful. If you're interested, I recently posted a 1-year follow-up here: czcams.com/video/4hHi0Xs1bHA/video.htmlsi=DpapVE2FkiDzVyjY