Composting

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Anything related to composting, vermicomposting, bokashi, etc.

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Like Mastodon it’s ActivityPub-based, so you can subscribe to communities from your Mastodon account and have posts (and their comments, fully threaded!) appear in your Mastodon timeline. For example, here’s /c/composting on the SLRPNK instance: ‪@composting

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I have a happy worm bin that takes care of most of my composting needs. I use the castings around my garden, mostly when I'm planting something new, but I also feed my established plants with it when I can.

But! I've also been thinking it'd be great to deliver castings right into the ground, and would love to use semi-buried containers in the beds to compost right there. There are plenty of native composting worms in my location.

I have a bunch of small (1-1.5 liter ish?) buckets with lids that I'd love to repurpose for this. I was thinking I'd make a bunch of holes in the body and lid of the buckets, and bury them up to the rim. Then fill with some bedding and some scraps, and inoculate with come castings and some worms. And just feed whenever there's space, hoping the castings spread a bit into the ground, or otherwise dig it up when it's full of castings and bury it in a new spot.

My main concern is that the buckets would be too small. The reason I'm aiming for this size is honestly because I want to use these containers for something useful instead of tossing them out. I'd love any suggestions and to hear about your experiences with in-ground composting!

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cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/469245

The City Council passed a bill on Thursday requiring New Yorkers to separate their food waste from regular trash, with mandatory composting coming to all five boroughs by next year.

The residential mandate will roll out borough by borough, starting with Brooklyn and Queens this October, followed by the Bronx and Staten Island in March 2024, and Manhattan that October.

The goal is to reduce the amount of organic waste the city sends to landfills, where it produces a particularly potent greenhouse gas called methane.****

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Just stumbled upon this documentary trailer, and I find it highly inspiring. I've been thinking about asking my municipality how they/we could stimulate composting at home, but an approach as I understand from this short trailer would be so much cooler.

There's more info in the link below. Apparently the full documentary premiered last week or the week before, I'm going to try to find it. If somebody has found it, please share!

https://opencollective.com/happenfilms/projects/ben-and-beartha#category-ABOUT

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cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/464104

Who is farming worms? What method do you use? What bedding? What do you feed them?

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