Paper shredder and garden compost.

Started by flossy, February 26, 2009, 17:23:42

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flossy



   Bought a shredder today and saw off a mountain of old paperwork ...   great,

   what bothers me is knowing it's common practice to mix the paper into your compst  --

   I'm really bothered about all the printing ink going in too,

   Advise please,   thank you.

   floss x
Hertfordshire,   south east England

flossy

Hertfordshire,   south east England

manicscousers

I'm sure there was a thread about this before, isn't the ink vegetable based ?
we shred all our junk mail, envelopes and old printed paper, put it in the chicken coop then into the compost heap  ;D

hippydave

ive been putting all my shredded mail in the composter and all my news papers  i never put glossy paper in there tho but i found this quite interesting (Ink contains pigment coloring, and press returns are contaminated with wash-up solvents and fountain chemistry. Vegetable oil-base inks are still considered hazardous waste.) :o
you may be a king or a little street sweeper but sooner or later you dance with de reaper.

flossy

 

   This is gonna sound daft !    ;D

   What if you soaked it in a bucket of water  --  would that get the ' nasties  ' out ?    ::)

    Thanks you two,  value your info.

    floss xxx
                 
Hertfordshire,   south east England

Bjerreby

Funny you should bring it up flossy.........I've been looking into inks recently for the same reason.

Black inks used to contain lead, but that is no longer the case except in specialist printing applications (some fancy books I gather). As far as I can tell, modern black ink is almost invariably vegetable based, usually soya. I think black ink is fine in the compost.

It is not quite so simple with coloured inks. They are also contain soya, but have added metallic compounds to get the colours.  I am not sure, but I wouldn't be surprised if yellow ink contains chrome.

Anyway, my position now is that no shiny paper goes in the compost, and nothing coloured.

flossy



   Thanks Bjerreby,   can happily compost away now   ;D

   floss xxx
Hertfordshire,   south east England

Old bird

I wouldn't have thought that unless you were using tons of the stuff that it would make that much difference anyway.  I used shredded paper from the office where I work and it certainly made good compost and it was a lot less "bitty" and more manageable to work too!

Old Bird

;D

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