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My Little Composter + The Plant-Buddy

My Little Composter + The Plant-Buddy
My daughter was playing around with a couple of empty CD-ROM containers and got them stuck together. Every time you buy a pack of CD or DVD discs to be burnt onto, you get another one of these crafty containers. If you are like me, you download an awful lot of junk, try out a lot of new software, and generally waste at least one of these per month. I should conduct a scientific study on where all those discs end up (probably in the recycle bin).

Once you get a couple of these lids stuck together, you can never get them apart again. They trap the air between them, creating a vacuum of sorts. I got to thinking that you could easily use one of these to pot a plant. And you could use two of these to pot a plant, with a water trap in the bottom. The reasoning for the lower chamber is to catch the excess water that leaks through the soil. In doing so, you will keep from over watering your plants. Also, you will see just how much you are over-watering them, as you will be able to see the water trapped below. That water should dry up. And if there is no indication of moisture in the bottom, it may be time to water your plant again! We will call this contraption the "plant buddy" on account that you should not over water and kill whatever you grow in it.

What soil shall we use? Many smart people are finding that you can compost your own materials and come out with better soil than the stuff you pay high dollar for at your local home stores. We won't need a lot of soil for our small pot. Composting is science. You need the right amounts of the right materials, in the right temperatures to come out with good stuff. You may not want a rotting garbage can of waste in your yard while you experiment. Hence, the "My Little Composter". A see-through container where you can compost your materials in small amounts. My kids took an interest in this project which made me think that this would make a great future science project.

We started with three containers of various sizes, and the matching inter-locking bottom pieces.
 
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Step 1Stick your lids together, and drill some holes

Stick your lids together, and drill some holes
If your lids are all ready stuck together, don't push them any further together. You may cause some structural damage in doing so (a crack). You can use a drill to do this, or a small steak knife. I like working with steak knifes for this because the material is so soft. If you use a drill, use caution. This plastic will give way pretty quickly. You don't want to drill all the way through the bottom container, or you will leak water on the counter every time you water your plant.

Pushing your knife inward, make a series of small holes. This will allow the water to seep to the bottom of the soil, and make it's way into the bottom chamber where it will dry up.
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33 comments
Jul 8, 2011. 2:18 AMHamenChips says:
Does it give off stinky odor of the composting garbage?
Mar 6, 2011. 8:16 AMdesignsmith says:
Brilliant idea! I just emptied one of these containers yesterday and will be making my mini-composter today. Some have mentioned adding worms to create "vermiculture". However, I wonder if the heat created inside a composting unit would result in some cooked worms. As I understand it, in order for composting to occur the temperature of the material must reach a minimum of 130 degrees Fahrenheit. So, it would appear to me that it's one or the other-vermiculture or composting. Any thoughts?
Mar 4, 2011. 12:54 PMuberdum05 says:
If you built lots of them, you could put a rubber band across all of them and then have an arduino with a motor turn them however often you like!
Mar 29, 2010. 11:23 PMsgsidekick says:
As for reusing the discs themselves?  We've always collected them from coworkers.  We glue the tops together so the data surfaces (shiny sides) are on the outside.  Then just string them on fishing line and hang in the garden to look pretty and keep birds out of certain areas.  Mostly just to look pretty.  Catches the sun very well!!  *lol*
Nov 25, 2009. 12:56 PMhoudini65 says:
How is the smell?
Sep 16, 2009. 12:51 PMhishealer says:
I'm thinking about adding worms to this... but still studying up on the subject, starting with the Wiki site you provided. Thanks!
Aug 16, 2008. 9:38 AMMarcos says:
This is a fun idea, and a great way to re-use what normally goes in the trash (at least for those who aren't pack-rat/makers). But how many of these can you use in your CD-burning frenzy? What if you bought CD-RWs and re-used the disks? It sounds like a lot of the software you download may be expendable. Better yet, get an external (or add an internal) hard drive to your computer and skip the CDs altogether!
Dec 7, 2008. 7:35 PMrick.leasure says:
Well, even over a period of time, we can collect these because they're cool and should have some kind of reuse-ability. I have several. Further, after burning my cd's or dvd's, I transfer those that I keep into albums. Mostly, I do the burning for other folks. (Wedding videos, etc.) I thought it was a great idea. Now I'm looking for a great idea for reusing the trashed disks themselves!
Sep 16, 2009. 12:28 PMhishealer says:
Anything you need structural support for in that shape. I have seen crochet projects that use discs for the support in the bottom of a bag or something.
May 23, 2009. 9:34 AMMarcos says:
How about using re-writable discs so you don't have any waste at all?
May 26, 2009. 9:08 AMMarcos says:
Well, I feel pretty stupid when I make a mistake or have a failed burn on a CD-R and can't do anything but toss it in the recycling bin. I can't recall needing to erase a CD-RW more than once, so I guess my needs are different than yours. Last time I bought some, a couple of years ago, the re-writables were a few cents apiece more. CDRs seem to be harder to get these days anyway.
May 22, 2009. 1:33 PMrebeckler says:
If you do mosaic, you could Destroy them, and then make pretty art out of the pieces. Or you could keep them intact and decorate with them. Or both!
Feb 5, 2009. 7:43 AMGeneral Lee 45 says:
We use the no good disks to hang around in our fruit trees to help keep the birds away from the fruit. The slight movement and reflection seems to scare them off at least until We harvest the fruit.
Jul 25, 2009. 9:50 PMjarjar761 says:
hey i gotta new idea thanks to this but its all mine jk its a great idear really i wouldve never thought of this and my mom wants a mini composter
Apr 7, 2009. 3:05 PMYerboogieman says:
Nice, 2 in 1 instructables both really cool.
Jan 27, 2009. 11:13 AMplzspoilme25 says:
going with worms stack a couple more high, with holes in bottoms for worms to work up... have some sort of drain at bottom one for worm compost tea.....
Jan 27, 2009. 11:08 AMplzspoilme25 says:
as for the disk, i'm guessing most dont end up recycled, but we can hope, my good idea.....tie them from string outside in my garden to keep out the birds and such....
Aug 10, 2008. 7:47 AMxeno says:
If you drill a small hole in the bottom of the "dirt container" in your planter, and slide a small piece of cotton through (an old bootlace works great!), it will act as a wick to keep the soil moist at all times, and if you put a small "refilling" hole in the side of the bottom container just below the level of the upper container inside, you can add water in the bottom easily to leach into the soil on top.
Dec 7, 2008. 7:41 PMrick.leasure says:
Or, maybe running a tube down from the top thru to the bottom container. This way, over filling will only result in the chance of soggy soil instead of a spill. You can even hot glue the tube to the side of the container.
Oct 23, 2008. 12:41 PMdweeby says:
Safety issue, you should point the blade edge down towards the table, away from your hand so you don't get a demonstration of how well steak knives cut through meat...
Dec 7, 2008. 7:38 PMrick.leasure says:
Personally, I'd use the hot nail method. Pliers keep fingers from being burnt and the chance of damaging the nerves in your hand with a steak knife is reduced greatly.
Nov 6, 2008. 5:37 PMkatherine123 says:
I am going to have my children make these before we make our compost barrel outside so they will get to see what is going on. What a great teaching tool!
Sep 12, 2008. 6:19 PMboyrock375 says:
have u thought about making a bigger on say out of a coffe container or something
Jul 15, 2008. 5:52 PMTommy3744 says:
Would it be possible to create a compost bin out of a plastic bottle? Or is it not that simple.
Jun 20, 2008. 7:47 AMpamelahowell says:
SO COOL! Thanks! The condo development I just moved into has a 'no composting' policy (for outside)...this looks perfect for the inside of my house! I also love to use steak knives as a primary tool.
Apr 29, 2008. 3:57 PMminerallad says:
Awesome idea! I do most of my gardening indoors (our house has two huge trees out front that give us full shade there, the side-yard was poisoned with termite poison that plants absorb, and that doesn't go away, and the backyard is inhabited by a golden retriever), so this will be a perfect little addition to my stuff! Great idea! The only thing that I may suggest is to put a mesh over the holes so that nothing falls out! =]
Feb 20, 2008. 6:14 PMThe Saminator says:
sweet.... Very cool!
Dec 9, 2007. 12:05 AMargosxilow says:
Very cool! I have been wanting to compost, but haven't done because not only are big compost bins expensive, but I live in a little apartment half of the year, and in college dorms the rest of the year. I'll definitely be doing this.
Jun 4, 2007. 5:27 PMmomo! says:
What a great idea! Very reminiscent of those kiddie compost kits with the spray bottles sold over Scholastic Books catalogs when I was a kid.
Jun 4, 2007. 12:32 PMjones_von_stone says:
Jun 4, 2007. 12:31 PMjones_von_stone says:
yea! thats pretty cool. i gona use it at home

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