Using paving slabs for compost bin base

Started by George the Pigman, January 19, 2022, 19:13:05

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George the Pigman

I am finally clearing out my overfull old New Zealand style double compost bin and after many years use it needs replacing as it is falling to bits.
I've a lot of old paving slabs from another project. Is there any reason why I can't use them to slab the base of the new bin? It would make clearing it out easier.
I am going to start the new bin off with partially rotted stuff from the old bin so any worms etc will be already their to work their magic.

George the Pigman


tricia

I have 2 daleks permanently standing on paving slabs, albeit close to my raised beds -  no problem at all and the compost is awash with red wrigglers. As you propose to do, I also use remaining half rotted material to start off the freshly emptied darlek on its next cycle each year.

Tricia  :wave:

InfraDig

I have two daleks on a concrete base by a brick building, not particularly close to soil, and they have plenty of red wigglers. I did give each bin a starting layer, but I think they would probably have found the bins even if I hadn't. "Build it and they will come"!!

gray1720

Yep - I have a single dalek on a slab base, and it turns anything I throw at it into compost at a terriffying rate, plus has lots of wrigglers. Go for it!
My garden is smaller than your Rome, but my pilum is harder than your sternum!

Vinlander

I got around the need for a base by using an old galvanised coldwater tank on its end - the rolled edges (now upright) keep the planks in place and I get a lot less rat problems, so I recommend it.

I needed to cut off what was the top panel for convenient loading - but I slide it in like a guillotine so I only need a few planks to fill it to the top. I find compost bins "eat" planks - and the bottom planks were an easier route for rats anyway.

If a really rapid heap is essential then you can line it with cardboard or newspapers - without worrying too much about rats. Also PU foam sheets are available from your local skip.

Cheers
With a microholding you always get too much or bugger-all. (I'm fed up calling it an allotment garden - it just encourages the tidy-police).

The simple/complex split is more & more important: Simple fertilisers Poor, complex ones Good. Simple (old) poisons predictable, others (new) the opposite.

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