What to do with Garden Non-compostables

What to do with Garden Non-compostables

Waste bag

It seems a waste to put non-compostables into landfill if there is an alternative. Fortunately our local authority provides a green bag and collection service. Your local tip will probably have separate areas for hardcore and other garden waste.

Composting Means and Methods

  • Garden compost heaps are for short term rotters taking 6-12 months.
  • ‘Green bag’ council schemes are better able to cope with problem rotting and are suitable for items listed below.
  • Landfill is far longer term rotting but even this is not suitable for Japanese Knotweed which needs burning.
  • Wormeries are fine for green waste and cooked food and scraps.

What do you Avoid on your Compost Heap

  • Anything that you avoid putting on your compost heap is classified as non-compostable for this purpose.
  • Roots particularly from trees are often too slow to rot down and I green bag them.
  • Pernicious roots sometimes survive the heat of my compost. Then they regrow loads of new plants when the compost is spread. So weeds and perennial roots  get green bagged.
  • Seed heads are green bagged so the council can compost them on an industrial scale.
  • Diseased and infected plant material is also green bagged except honey fungus
  • Excess of one waste product such as twiggy slow rotting stalks sometimes end up in my green bag.
  • Ruble and pure clay can’t be green bagged and needs to go to landfill unless you can create a new use for them like a base for a raised bed or pond.

Read about beginning a compost heap to get more tips and ideas.

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