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Trench compost

Trench compost
I like to garden, not 'to compost,' and I found TRENCH COMPOSTING to be the easiest way for us to deal with our kitchen and yard scraps to make nice (wonderful) dirt.
Compsting isn't stinky, hard, or time consuming; you shouldn't have to buy or make special bins or powders or barrels. It should be (and IS) the most natural thing on earth, so don't make it more complicated than it has to be! Read on...
 
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Step 1Find a location

You'll want to find a good location; preferably a place where it is easy to get to from where you'll be producing the biodegradable material (often from your kitchen) and where you want the soil to be enriched (like a garden or future garden).
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26 comments
Aug 25, 2011. 7:25 PMJust Bill says:
A variation on this theme is to use holes instead of a trench. The holes can be dug between plants all season and extras dug in late fall and covered with a handful of straw. Use a trowel, augur or post-hole digger, depending on your circumstances.
Dec 5, 2010. 3:31 PMgemtree says:
Superb! But since I am lazy, I will use this as well as my barrel. The barrel, I just go out, open lid, throw in. No digging til I am ready to garden. Hopefully next year will be gardening time.
Jul 10, 2010. 6:00 PMropegro says:
Since I have a very small backyard and an even smaller garden 3x4, I love trench composting. I have noticed that when I bury my scraps they are completely gone in a maximum of two weeks. Any remarks as to why the ground absorbs the scraps so quickly? This garden is less than 1 year old. I bought a pound of worms and they hung around for about a month and now are gone. I have lived in the AZ desert all my life but have never seen anything like this.
Jul 13, 2010. 2:13 PMropegro says:
Would you happen to know why the worms are not wanting to stay around?
Dec 23, 2008. 10:44 PMmbg007 says:
from what i understand, fishy scraps are no good for composting (shrimp shells, fish bones and skin, etc.)-- bad bacteria and stinky. is this true for trench composting too?
May 10, 2009. 12:10 PMstrmrnnr says:
The fish do make a good fertilizer but do smell. They are best used at the bottom of a hole covered with a good amount of dirt. The roots will find them and the animals usually won't bother with them if they are far down enough to cover the smell. We lived on a lake that depleted with oxygen every winter. The shores where lined with dead fish every Spring. We would dig deep trenches and pour fish in and cover them then plant the garden on top. The soil eventually became very rich, as the fish from the year before which had decayed and lost its smell, mixed with the soil while digging the next year.
Apr 7, 2009. 8:47 AMlilykoart says:
i agree with you! why bother with the expense, all that turning??? i just toss my table scraps under the bushes. i however avoid paper that has been bleached with chlorine. brown coffee filters ok, but i'd rather save them for biodegradable peat pots :)
Oct 26, 2009. 8:44 AMReagenWard says:
Why bother with all that turning?  Aerobic decomposition vs anaerobic.
Oct 13, 2009. 11:03 AMmiriana1981 says:
 Thank you for bringing simplicity back!!! I also remember my grandma using this method, she was also raising goats, sheep and rabbits and was adding the manure to a separate pile that was left to mature in sections...
Jul 31, 2008. 2:59 PMtshima says:
Thank you so much for your instructable. I am very excited to start my own compost trench, and delighted to learn i don't have to buy , build or till any gadget to compost.
Jun 6, 2008. 1:29 PMgrimcat27 says:
most newspapers are ok the ink is soy most of the time
Mar 31, 2008. 1:45 PMdbjccomfrey says:
hey Meddler- don't be so hard on the wifey!It was worth it! I've got one of those black tumblers, {$120} and their great! It also has a catch basin which I make compost tea with. I also have a 4 part pallet compost system,and plans to start another. This way there's always compost going, and I need alot. Even if you didn't have any compost at all, just mix some grass clippings from the mower- organic fertilizer in the garden, and I know you'll get produce. Then start incorporating the kitchen scraps into the garden as the season goes along. And remember you dont even have to dig to build a small garden if you don't want to just lay newspapers down- wet real good,secure with rocks if windy, and plant on top of that..no tilling...
Mar 4, 2008. 11:14 AMspeltbaker says:
this is a wonderful instructable! thank you. my grandmother never composted - she buried all the kitchen scraps in her garden. she had quite a large plot of beautiful vegetables and flowers, so i know this method works!
Sep 10, 2007. 11:36 AMosibisa says:
i'm reduced to "composting" on a second floor balcony at the moment--So, into a large terracotta (in this case plastic) pot -I'm in the north, and don't want it to crack- I put all my good vegetable and fruit ends, after blending them to mush with a stick blender. I pour this onto a base of decent earth (in the pot) and work it in with my hands. It smells divine and fresh, and feels good, like really good soil. Next spring, it'll go into the ground. thanks for the nod to green manure crops. any specific suggested reading?
Jun 3, 2007. 2:12 PMmcadwell says:
IMHO that's too much work. I layer a few sheets of newspaper under a thick layer of grass clippings between my plants to prevent weeds from growing. Everyday I put the my compostables in a plastic container with a lid. It's normally a smaller amount, between 1-4 cups. Once a day I pick a spot under the grass clippings (a different spot each time) and shove the compostables under it. That's it. It starts to decompose immedietly giving the plants nutrients that year and the next year, when I barely till it, it's pretty much dissolved into the soil. Newspaper shreddings and some peels (canteloupe for example) take a while longer to decompose but not softer vegie parts (like tomato).
Jun 3, 2007. 2:15 PMmcadwell says:
Oops, forgot to say that I took the compostables out of the plastic container first. This plastic container is NOT compostable... unfortunately.
May 30, 2007. 8:14 PMmeddler says:
If your going to use newspaper the black and white part is ok most printers now use soy based ink, you don;t want to use the color section that ink is still toxic.
May 30, 2007. 5:21 PMroyalestel says:
Your pic is gorgeous... Is that your garden, really?
May 30, 2007. 5:20 PMroyalestel says:
As a disclaimer, I've never, in 4 years of trying, successfully composted. But, I wanted to let you know, shredded newspaper is an excellent addition to compost, and either attracts worms or just feeds them. Shredded white paper is okay, too, just not as thin and decomposable.
May 30, 2007. 7:53 AMroyalestel says:
Please post bigger pictures of your compost trench.
Feb 10, 2011. 8:31 PMmeddler says:
Now this is interesting, wish i had known this before my wife spent 60 bucks on some black composter bin thingy. What do you do if you don't want to wait a year to plant your garden? have two garden plots? Or dig your trench between the rows and compost that?

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