Category Archives: General

Welcome to Compostopolis!

What a fantastic weekend. Two days of glorious, warm sunshine. It made me smile!

This year, Mr Mac and I have a long list of jobs to do in the garden other than growing things. The problem is one job needs to be done before the next one can be started. The time had come, we could put it off no longer – the compost bins had to be moved!

How NOT to build a compost bin!

old compost bins

How not to build a compost bin

When we moved here almost 4 years ago, Mr Mac built 3 huge composting bins at the bottom of the garden. One bin had to be demolished last year to make way for the new greenhouse and the remaining 2 were just in the wrong place.

As you can see from the photo they were huge and we could get loads of stuff in them.  However, size is not everything! To make compost successfully it needs to be turned. This is done by mixing it up to allow the air to get in. Our bins were too high to be able to do this.

We did eventually get lovely compost but it took nearly 2 years while we waited for the waste to break down.

How to do it properly

The error of our way was made clear one Friday evening courtesy of Monty Don on Gardeners World. He showed (or showed off according to an envious Mr Mac) viewers his composting “bays”. Simple compartments open at one end to allow waste to be wheelbarrowed in, tipped and left to break down.

The walls of each compartment were low enough to allow the compost to be turned by moving it from one bay to the next. A few weeks later it can be moved back. The most recent waste on top is then at the bottom and plenty of air is introduced which then speeds up the process.

This system should provide useable compost in as little as 3 months – a substantial improvement on 2 years!

New compost baysHere is the result using some old corrugated seets and some fence posts.

The end bay will hold the compost that is ready to use and the other two will be used to alternate the compost that is breaking down. The walls are low enough to allow the composting waste to be lifted over with a fork into the next bay, introducing lots of air in the process.

So what do we compost?

To make good compost we use lots of different material. Fine waste such as grass clippings, coarse waste such as potato peelings, dry waste such as cardboard (Mr Mac highly recommends empty beer boxes for this!)  and wet waste such as other garden waste. We keep one of the small plastic composting bins you buy in the supermarket under the kitchen sink and fill it with veg peelings, tea bags, coffee grinds and egg shells.

A balanced mix provides the right amount of air and moisture to allow the bacteria to heat up and break down the waste. Worms also help – hence the reason Mr Mac has banned me from adding citrus peel – the worms don’t like it apparently!

And finally……

After a hard day in the garden I sat down to read the Sunday paper. I came across an article about an award-winning composting shed which is set to become the star of this year’s Scotland’s Garden’s Scheme (www.scotlandsgardens.org). Feeling quite smug about our newly constructed compost bays, I read on to see what the fuss was about.

The garden’s owner had commissioned a firm of architects to build the £22,000, 7ft shed made of curved weathered steel and with a wildflower meadow roof.

Our composting bays probably did not even cost £2 – and that was the cost of the biscuits we ate while having our tea break!

Hello world!

Welcome to my first blog.

I must start with a confession! I had intended to start this over a month ago to coincide with start of the growing year.  So I will need to provide a quick summary of where I’ve got to so far.

On the hard landscaping side,  last year we rescued an old conservatory from a house in Edinburgh that was being refurbished. It has been rebuilt at the bottom of the garden to provide a third greenhouse area. Mr Mac has provided me with two raised beds, shelving and a potting bench. It looks so good it has inspired him to build more paths and walls to link all the growing areas in the garden.

The other two greenhouses have been bleached and fumigated and are raring to be put into action.

Flower seeds planted so far- sweet peas, livingstone daisies (see banner for last year’s flowers), cosmos, osteospermum, rudbeckia, verbena, coreopsis, gazania, dahlia pom pom, silver dust, marigolds, lavender, snapdragons, morning glory, aster, iceland poppies, sunflower waooh! (grown in pots) and helichrysum.

Veg seeds planted so far – carrots, chilli (bird’s eye, razzamatazz and hotscotch), tomatoes, melon, peas, aubergine, red cabbage, brussel sprouts, brocolli, okra, aubergine, courgette, sweet basil, lemon basil, leeks, lettuce and early potatoes.

Disasters so far – 1! A friend gave us a heated propogator so we could bring on some early tomatoes and chillies. I cooked them! Second attempt is better with the first chilli seed germinating just this morning- wey hey!

I am trying lots of new flowers and veg this year, in particular, aubergine and okra. I am also going to try an area filled purely with cut flowers. I also have plans for a “blue wall”. Last year we replaced the old snow damaged fencing with a trellis and pergola and this year I have planted blue morning glory seeds and blue sweet peas, both vigorous climbers, which will hopefully cover both with gorgeous blue flowers.

Anyway, Mr Mac is calling for my assistance in upgrading one of the veg beds so best go and help!

Enjoy the sunshine!

   greenhouse ready for action!

This old conservatory was being thrown in a skip. All we had to do was build a supporting wall at the bottom of the garden to sit it on.