Dear Sarah
It’s notoriously difficult to predict how
often the contents of an established compost heap will require
turning but traditionally, gardeners have tended to turn their bins
when they add new material. This is rather an old fashioned method
of composting and you’ll be pleased to hear there are
alternative, far easier, methods you can use. I’ll
explain...
To begin with, it’s not actually essential to
turn a heap if you build it correctly to start with. This involves
creating plenty of air spaces which is just what you are trying to
achieve when you turn material. Add in plenty of egg boxes,
corrugated cardboard, kitchen and toilet roll centres, scrunched up
paper and cardboard and lots of twigs and branches when building
your heap and these bulky compostable materials will create the
essential air spaces required for the composting process to occur.
You may wish to create a layer of twigs and branches at the bottom
of the heap to help create an airway as well.
This is all very well if you are starting a heap but
an established heap not constructed in this fashion will need some
kind of aerating. You don’t have to resort to the back
breaking task of forking the material over as there are compost stirrers and aerators available
which require much less effort. You can also plunge a hefty stick
or broom handle into the heap every week or so as well; this may
sound crude but essentially you are doing exactly the same thing
– creating air spaces!
The question of how to get your compost hotter and
hopefully kill off those weed seeds takes a little more organising.
Basically, the larger the volume of material you add to a compost
bin in one hit, the hotter the core temperatures and the more
likely that weed seeds will be killed. Adding little and often is
known as cool composting and as you say, the finished material is
just as good but is likely to contain weed and other seeds as a
sufficient temperature is not reached to fry them!
Therefore, you’ll need to add large amounts of
mixed (half green, half brown) material in one go to create the
higher temperatures needed to finish off seeds, and you will get
useable compost in weeks rather than months following this method.
This necessitates providing a mixing or holding area to store
material before dumping it all in a bin, but you could also make
sure you compost any weeds before they flower or seed.
Finally, you might want to try grassboarding. This
isn’t an extreme sport but a way of producing excellent
compost from predominantly grass cuttings and kitchen waste, mixed
thoroughly with paper, cardboard and egg boxes, for example. This
is a great way of getting rid of a glut of grass clippings as
adding them exclusively to a ‘normal’ heap can result
in a slimy wet, smelly mess!
Martin