Back Acres: Heaping the Compost in the Cubic Meter Bin for Hot Composting

in ecotrain •  7 years ago  (edited)

We've had enough warm weather and rain to finally thaw the composting bin pile. We have a cubic meter volume composting bin that was about 1/8th full - before the winter came and froze it in place. Now that the composting pile is fully thawed, today is a good day to climb into the composting bin to give it a turn and heap it to one side for faster and more thorough composting.

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In the picture above you can see the approximately 1 meter x 1 meter x 1 meter compost bin. You can also see the Spading Fork with the green handle. A pitch fork could work well too, but the spading fork seems a more appropriate size when I climb into the small space of the cubic meter compost bin. The weight of the properly wet compost may be more difficult to handle with the larger pitch fork as well. You can also see the orange Watering Container, soon I will be running the hose that brings dish and laundry water down from the cabin to fill the dangling watering container until it sprinkles water onto the composting pile.

In the picture below you can see my wintered - rubbish looking compost pile. It's not as sad as it looks. Underneath the thin layer of cardboard boxes that were tossed in there over the winter is mostly half composted grass clippings - about a foot deep. As I was digging around in there, I noticed that the dry brown grass clippings around the edge of the bin looked like they hadn't composted at all. Keeping the compost pile wet is very important for the organic material to break down into fine quality gardening dirt.

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Hot Composting

When a good combination of small pieces of dry brown organic material like cardboard, dry leaves, and chipped wood - and green organic material like fresh trimmed leaves, kitchen vegetable scraps, coffee grounds (not filters), and herbivore animal bedding are combined into a large enough compost pile, within a few days the well insulated center of the pile can reach up to 76 degrees Celsius. To keep the aerobic microbes happy and composting quickly, the compost pile has kept wet - drained so not too wet - and well aerated. A composting pile can often be kept well aerated by strategically adding small dry branches at key locations to create air pockets. If a hot compost pile is not getting enough oxygen, it may need to be turned to restart the hot composting process.

For more information about composting - what to compost and what not to compost, this is a link to a Downloadable and Printable .PDF file: http://www.gov.pe.ca/photos/original/WI_KComposting1.pdf

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In the picture above you can see the composting bin through the trees as I approach from the cabin. The picture below is an above view from climbing a close tree.

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The video below is of the approach and the inside of the freshly turned composting bin.

Cubic Meter Composting Bin Structure

A cubic meter is a good size for a composting bin - there is sufficient organic material in that size of a composting pile to provide enough insulation for hot composting to easily start on the inside. A composting bin is not required, but it would be the most useful if you are composting kitchen scraps or other materials that would attract animals to the pile.

Composting Bin Frame

I used scrap metal poles to construct the frame of the composting bin. For two of the corners metal poles were driven into the ground. Two small and living spruce trees were used for the other two corners.

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In the picture below you can see one of the metal pole corners of the composting bin where it is driven into the ground.

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In the picture below you can see the top part of the metal pole where it suspends the upper-horizontal metal poles of the composting bin frame.

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In the picture below you can see how the branches on the far tree corner help hold up the upper-horizontal metal poles of the composting bin frame.

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Composting Bin Siding

For the composting bin siding is an old solar water heating plastic sheet. It had small holes in it, someone had discarded it - I had been holding onto it for years. In the pictures below you can see I sliced small slits in the plastic sheet - to run zip-ties through - to attach to siding to the composting bin frame.

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In the video below you can see me jump into the composting bin to give the compost a turn and heap it to one side of the bin. With this small amount of compost, heaping will help provide an insulated center for the potential of hot composting - especially with this warmer summer weather on the way.

The compost bin jumping in and turning video starts at regular speed and then speed up to 8x speed for the rest of the video. In the first part of the video you can see me removing plastic plant seedling cups that had left over soil in them. Plastic materials have a noticeably different squeaky sound when forked - as compared to organic material. Any plastic that I discovered was tossed out of the bin for proper disposal.

Video: 8x Speed Compost Bin Turning and Heaping

I the picture below you can see the before and after heaping of the compost pile. The cardboard layer on top was moved to the chicken wire gate to help prevent material from falling through - or the cardboard was forked to smaler pieces and mixed in with the grass clippings.

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In the picture below you can more easily see how the composting pile is heaped in the bin.

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I am hoping to fill this cubic meter composting bin with organic materials by the end of the summer, being sure to keep the longer composted material on the side of the gate. The side opposite the gate is where I will be loading fresh grass clippings and nightly kitchen scraps.

Have a great day!

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Oh I forgot about you guys!!! Makers of steemit Unite 😁

This is great. I have something similar that I just built using old scraps of wood and chicken wire, some weed suppressant membrane to line it from the odd bits I had laying around my garden. I hope your compost turns out well for you.

Thanks, I was pretty happy with how the dry field grass trimmings I put in there this past fall were looking, it wont take much of the summer heat to finish them off. I'm convinced that keeping the pile damp is big help.

Ahhh I can remember when we had chickens and they got ALL the kitchen scraps. Wish I could have a compost bin here- just not enough room

I wanted to get a little piggy for the purpose of scrap processing, but we decided we'd become too attached and the piggy to process him and it would just be another mouth to feed :) I do plan on getting egg laying chickens this summer, I'll be setting up a compost pile for them to scratch around in :)

I am a bit of a newbie to composting but I've always thrown my filters in the compost. So why not the coffee filters too?

Most coffee filters and tea bags have synthetic fibers that dont break down, so they advise against putting them in the compost. I personally dont think ot would be a problem if chopped up real small, but it wouldnt be completely composted if that is the goal.

I never knew that. The compost articles I've read say that coffee filters are ok, maybe I will look into what my Bunn coffee filters are made with it will give me a better idea on whether to keep'em or chuck'em.

Good job man... Looks like you're coming on in leaps and bounds... You get any bears there?

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Thanks @preppervetuk - I'll keep posting the progress :) No bears that I've heard of on this side of the lake. On the other side of the lake they have to watch out a little more for them, there's a lot of open forest north of them. To get to my property they would have to go through a gauntlet of human territory.

wow, that is one of the hugest compost piles i've ever seen.. congratulations!!

Our soil here is mostly rocks and clay, so I knew I had to think big for composting. I'll also be planting some cover crops - just for the purpose of composting - so I can keep improving the garden soil year after year :)

Composting is just magic, isn't it? 😁

It's amazing - these scraps will just keep giving and giving :)

Like chickens!!! Miracle recycling creatures!!

It's a great job although I imagine that it will bring bad smells and rare animals in nearby areas @jackdub

Suprisingly very limited smells with it well enough aerated and drained - much worse smells from garbage inside a sufocating plastic bag. I've only noticed the usual wild animals since I've installed it. If they have gotten in there, the tall sides prevented them from bringing compost outside of the bin :)

I get mice but that's okay. Birds if I don't cover the scraps with straw. But never smells.

This is just the kind of thing I love to do! I've got a new article https://steemit.com/permaculture/@mobios/get-shut-in-the-cold Please check it out and let me know what you think!

Hello again @jackdub, how are you doing my friend?

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Keep up with the great work :) and thanks for sharing!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Hi @carpedimus - thanks for the curation :) With all the nice outdoor weather here I've been keeping busy with building the garden beds and terraces - one more week until outdoor transplanting. I enjoy your curations and sustainable urban indoor garden project :)

Thank you very much for the kind words, I really appreciate it!
I work hard on this curation posts and it is good to know there are some people that actually find them interesting :)

Yeah the weather is awesome and although it been going a bit crazy recently (hail storm one day, khamaseen (sand) storms the other), but it is awesome nevertheless.
Been planting quite a few veggies lately and already had some amazing harvests!

Looking forward to see your updates...

Peace

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We just emptied our first successful composting project into the garden - it's so satisfying to make your own instead of having to buy it. My bins are so small compared to yours though - after seeing your bin you've encouraged me to "think bigger" when it comes to composting.

Excellent man, I like that you used what looks like the metal legs of a broken pop up tent or e-z up tent or something like that!!! They are all over the place in the rubbish after a festivals!

There are a couple different schools of thought regarding turning a hot compost pile. Some prefer to let it be, but it greatly depends on layering your brown and green materials I guess too!

How about compost tpilets, are you guys into that?

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

That's exactly what those metal poles are frome - we had two of them broke down from previous years at outdoor markets. When I moved out here I brought all the structure useable metal, wood, shingles, etc that I had - made a little scrap pile area here, very handy for projects. Yeah much eadier not to turn it if it's built right, but if the mixture or layering is iff abd it needs oxygen the a turning might be needed.
I think like 2 people in ontario in a somewhat populated area have gotten a permit for a composting toilet - very tough out here, or I would. Out here they want a septic bed for permitted residences. The gov isnt really behind the eco like they say they are with modern techniques, they just want to slap a carbon tax on it and call it a day.

I knew it...pop up tents!

That is very wise having a little metal scrap area. My wife said we could have one as long as it's out of sight!

As for composting toilets it's pretty much the same here, you need a septic system to build a permited house too. There are the occasional houses with composting toilets but they have to be the "professional" kind that are quite costly!

Havebyou read yhe Humanure Handbook? He talks a little about how to get around the law with this... in essence, if backyard composting is allowed where you live (he is talking about the US now), than there is no say about composting what you want.