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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment.

PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book.

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  1.  
    Hi everyone.
    I know this is the place we can be unashamedly green (well for me greenish as am a little pants at it all), and I also know that eveyone here is more green than me, but I found this website which helps you lobby about clothes, and large supermarkets etc. It is called www.thenag.net. I have started a nag about hotels. Cheifly about overheating and plastic wrapping.

    Now to composting.
    I am a newbie gardener, and have a compost bin, which I don't think it works too well. I am thinking of getting a food digester which can take all the waste food in the house . Anyone have any advice on a good (total food) composter? I am looking at green cones and Green Johanna,( which for some bizarre reason makes me think of goats and cheese, and The Grandfather.). But then I get distracted by wormeries. OH am confused!
    • CommentAuthormike7
    • CommentTimeJul 18th 2008
     
    Got room for a pig? :bigsmile:
    •  
      CommentAuthoragu
    • CommentTimeJul 18th 2008
     
    Helen if you get no joy here with your compost questions then try the forum on its not easy being green website they cover alot of green living things where as this one more about buildings.
    • CommentAuthorRachel
    • CommentTimeJul 18th 2008
     
    Why doesn't the compost bin work well? Just keep adding shredded paper, sawdust, ash to it all now and then...
    • CommentAuthormike7
    • CommentTimeJul 19th 2008
     
    Helen - consulted my personal compost manager and light of my life, and she says maybe your bin contents are too dry - too much paper, cardboard, for example. Ours is nearly all veg. waste and we try to keep out fat or anything which might attract rats; it works well. Do you put earth in to help populate it? or maybe better still a dollop from someone elses bin. A bit of air into it is good too, but not so much as to dry it out.
    Hope this helps
    PS not all that green ouselves either - more sort of eau de nil
    • CommentAuthorludite
    • CommentTimeJul 19th 2008
     
    I have 2 black compost bins, and an area where I chuck other stuff - ie. the half bag of solid lime, the ash from the fire, large woody offcuts, and the sawdust from cleaning out the guinea pigs.

    I have noticed that tunnels are appearing in the black compost bins ( because I chuck in food waste too). Luckily we have 2 cats and we live far from neighbours. I suspect we have rats, but I'm hoping the foxes, badgers, weasles, stoats, owls, and other birds of prey are keeping their numbers down.

    My sister tried a worm bin once - she managed to drown them all - they are quite hard work to get established. . . . . . .

    To be honest, I have never managed to get compost that looks like it does in the adverts - ie, lift the bin after a year and find what you'd get out of a bag you buy from the garden centre. . . . . . . .

    What I do find amazing though, is the way you can keep on filling it up. . . . ..AND . . . .IT . . . . NEVER . . . . GETS . . . .FULL !!!!!!. . . . . . . now that's magic!
    • CommentAuthorjoe.e
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2008
     
    Posted By: ludite
    What I do find amazing though, is the way you can keep on filling it up. . . . ..AND . . . .IT . . . . NEVER . . . . GETS . . . .FULL !!!!!!. . . . . . . now that's magic!

    That'll be the large fat rats leaving by the rear entrance.
    • CommentAuthorludite
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2008
     
    :shamed: why did I not think of that!!!

    Having said that, I just planted out the last of my artichokes into a flower bed full of rodent holes. . . . . . the beasties are everywhere.

    I know about Viels disease - the deadly one you get from wet rodent pee. But is there any other rodent danger I should know about?
    • CommentAuthorjoe.e
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2008
     
    Actually, to be fair, compost does keep going down to an amazing extent. I think Viels disease (spelling?) is very rare; in general I don't think outdoor country rats present much of a health hazard.
    • CommentAuthorludite
    • CommentTimeJul 20th 2008
     
    I have a feeling it is a rare disease, but it's one thing I remember my hubby telling me when we began dating - it was his excuse for not licking his fingers when eating crisps.

    By the way, Grandpa LOL at your rat observation. Then hubby told me that the compost bins we left at the bungalow worked very well. It seems they just have to be left on their own for about a year before using the stuff. Makes me think I need at least 6 of the things to use in rotation.
  2.  
    Big thanks to everyone for all comments help to replace sawdust in head with useful info.

    I have no room for a pig (sigh)
    I think my compost errs on the side of too little dry stuff rather than not enough. So am going to try adding paper etc. Life does get a little confusing here. And now thoroughly depressed after watching Top Gear (too many vocal men in this house), and realising ALL my tiny green efforts wiped out by ONE program's worth of smug Z list celebrities driving cars round track. Plus, of course, I could do better.
    And this is my license fee. (oh and yours.... yes, yours too!):bigsmile:
    • CommentAuthorjoe.e
    • CommentTimeJul 21st 2008
     
    With the composting, if you have the right mix of wet green stuff - grass cuttings etc - and dry stuff, it should get quite hot and compost down quite quickly. But that type of composting relies on air getting in, so you have to stir or fork it up a bit from time to time, and make sure that grass cuttings in particular don't go into a solid wet mat that keeps the air out. But things will compost down without air, it just takes much longer - a year, maybe, rather than a couple of months. So the other approach is just to pile it up and leave it, then start another pile in the mean time.
  3.  
    Thanks Joe, I have been thinking for a while that I need to stir my stumps, and stir my compost, but I am really wanting to put all food waste in. I think I need something different for that, so was wondering if anyone had advice a bout what types to get?
    Cheers
    Helen
    • CommentAuthorjoe.e
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2008
     
    I just bung all ours onto a big open heap a fair way away from the house and let nature take its course. Eventually I start another heap, turn the old one from time to time then use it when it looks ready. I've got some hotter heaps, more carefully built, elsewhere, as well.
  4.  
    Thanks everyone for comments. I went up to CAT in Machynlleth, which is green living / building / composting heaven, and bought a Bokashi bin for all food waste, AND, moved my main compost, and turned it over, and added some cardboard and shredded paper. I think I might set up a larger / slower one for bits of branches and garden stuff as well.

    Thanks to you all for the advice.:bigsmile:
  5.  
    we have two big heaps in square frames made from reused wooden crates. We're not particularly careful about managing them, all sorts go in there except fat and meat. Use one for a year and then cover it up to stop weeds/grass growing on top, then let it moulder for about a year while we use the other one.
    I think ideally we could do with a third frame so that we can empty the dormant one into it after 6 months to turn it and fluff it up a bit. It seems to rot down really well, loads of worms etc. and the volume shrinks to at least a quarter of its size. The resultant compost is just like the stuff in the shops, in fact i think it might even be better!
    the only thing we leave out is big/long sticks because it makes turning it nigh on impossible, but if we had a chipper I would put that in as well as I think it gives the soil really good bulk.
  6.  
    Paul_B is your man for compost. His heap is a steady 40C. His trick is a winged compost stirrer.

    I have a number of systems on the go :

    1) big stuff (mostly big garden prunings in a heap with wood ash and other "this will take a while") type material.
    2) proper heap - very careful assembly of materials put together to create a hot, moist-ish, aerobic environment.
    3) wormery

    These are all situated for convenience ie wormery by the back garage door underneath the oil fired boiler (they need to be kept warm in winter) and a short step from the kitchen, compost heap = bottom of the garden, organic dump = way down the bottom of the garden (where I have found snakeskins and a mouse's nest) ...

    I'd love to know if those compost tumblers work as it does seem that compost turning is key.
  7.  
    You need to think of your tiger worms as pets. They can't manage too much at a time. They don't like citrus or too many onions and they can't deal with coconuts or avocado seeds. (Mine are kept strictly vegetarian except for squashed snails). Fruit flies can be a problem this weather so site your wormery carefully.
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