Fastslappy
Well-Known Member
I'd love to raise bunnies but my dogs would stress the fuckers to death
Whats up my brother?How you doing Grease!!!
Still dropping a lot of compost game I see, that's awesome my man
Hey grease,mi see a lot of leaves with a black type of fungus or some kind of black raised texture on them, would ya say that's some bad shit to avoid!?
Respects!
don
I'm gonna start scooping up these giant paper bags of leaves on the curb!!Whats up my brother?
so I never really worry much about any weird fungi or anything
hell I throw in huge mushrooms into my pile
but all those fungi are gonna fine, even if it were harmful molds or spores, those are vastly destroyed through the compost procedure.
Same philosophy for bugs, the ones that eat your plants? aren't in your compost. (the exception maybe fungus gnats)
and the same can be said for fungi
Look in the rabbit feed section. they have small bags of alfalfa pellets and alfalfa bales.So I finally did the thing I had been dreading and avoiding for months, and visited out local farmers supply joint.
The place that should be my paradise, where I find alll the lovely things I need and didn't need (Like the tool shop, where I go sometimes just to handle a sexy Makita or lovingly stroke a Metabo haha)
Ah it was disastrous, they have nothing, know nothing and while the guys themselves went way out of their ways to try and help and even apologized for being so chemically monostocked, there is no hope!
The only thing I could get from them would be a bale of alfalfa (700Kg, tad large for my bike? lol - but transport aside, I don't have anywhere I could stockpile the rest aaand I don't even know if it was nitrogen fixing alfalfa or not)
I could order fish meal at 2€/kg, would arrive "in a week or so", but nooo information about source or quality... so I'm not particularly enthusiastic - that is, I'd prefer to just let the pile go on its own, it's sitting with center temps at 28°C now, and last time I turned it I saw earthworms were beginning to explore from below...
The only thing I could get otherwise would be horn and hoof meal (also no source info, but at least it's freely available). I found a C:N ratio of 3 for it (in https://books.google.at/books?id=R5wHSeMQsV0C&pg=PA45&lpg=PA45&dq=C:N+ratio+of+horn+and+hoof+meal ), so it would be comparable to fish meal in that. But not sure whether it is really a replacement in terms of the other goodies fish meal contains, if that is at all relevant here...
But if that were the case!
How much fish meal would you add to 15cuft of broken down compost like mine to get it back up and going?
well, fastlappy has a valid point..Hey Grease, I went to check on my leaf compost, and lo, it seems my garden mice moved in sometime in November - and the pile looks a bit Swisscheesy now from all the tunnels they have dug into it
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So my first reaction was yay! I've got some helpers to do the turning for me
But is there anything I am not thinking of, that I should be aware of regarding mice in the compost pile?
Cheers!
LMAO thanks but no, if you wouldn't feel the need I definitely won't!well, fastlappy has a valid point..
rodent feces can be sketchy at best..
but I really would be shocked if it created a problem, however it's good practice to wear gloves and maybe get a lil filter for your nose and mouth when turning compost piles anyway
that being said I never do... (but that doesn't mean anything)
the biggest concern would be dried feces that is airborne, but typically a compost pile is NEVER dry and dusty..
I think you'd be fine, but i'd feel well beyond shitty if you got sick from anything.
just wear latex gloves and a good paper filter for you mouth to be safe
Yeah, I imagine you'd get cautious having experienced that!Sounds like u have plan caution rulz around vermin ,it's the dust that dangerous if inhaled
gloves are my standard tool in my garden & piles .been hospitalized twice due to infected cuts/thorns on my hands..........gone bad while gardening.it was 2 weeks with cacti throne in my thumb one time
My fig tree dose that in matter of weeksoh, this is what happens when you do a compost at the base of a bigass 150 yr old redwood
these are redwood tree roots... and they are BURLY.
it's literally like the roots ATE the compost, nothing left
no joke.
talk about a chore...
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yea...My fig tree dose that in matter of weeks
I guess that you have not seen me F some stuff up then!!!but typically a compost pile is NEVER dry and dusty..
yea but you live in the weird like black-hole of the united states where weather is weird and can simultaneously hit you with lightning whilst the tornado carries you off to a place laden with yellow brick roads...I guess that you have not seen me F some stuff up then!!!