Throwback Thursday: Easy At-Home Composting
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I don’t know about you guys, but the warm weather these past few days has really lifted my mood! The leaves are turning green and we’ll soon be packing away our winter coats. And since the city’s getting sunny and bright again, it’s time for a refresher course on going green in all aspects of life with an easy indoor composting kit.
Kids are learning from home and this composting kit makes for a fun learning experiment for the whole family. Jingkids writer Anna Pellegrin Hartley shares the step-by-step setup of her OwnMade Indoor Composting system and tips from Daniel Lim – creator of the OwnMade Indoor Composting system.
Setting it up
As per Lim’s instructions, I pour the dry mix into the felt bag and mix it through with a 2-liter batch of sugar water. Lim recommends using either brown sugar or molasses (which are high in minerals) for the water mix, but I only have honey around, and he says that will do.
In anticipation of the workshop, I’d been saving my kitchen scraps for about a week. I throw them in my trusty Kitchen Aid blender and blitzed them to a manageable size. This included banana peels, an old carrot, garlic, coffee grounds, some plant cuttings, and a couple of eggshells. According to Lim, as the average human diet is quite varied, food waste compost is uniquely rich in nutrients and nitrogen and produces some of the best compost around. Farmers love it, and I’m hoping that my houseplants will too.
Compost smoothie! Mmmm…
While it is possible to add large pieces of food, Lim doesn’t recommend it as it will dramatically slow-down the composting time, and is also likely to throw the microbe balance of this pocket-sized system out of whack.
I tip the blended compost into the bag with the now-activated starter, and mix it all thoroughly, then cover the bag securely with the nylon mesh to prevent flies and bugs from getting in. If flies do get in and birth maggots, I’ll most likely have to throw out the compost and start again from scratch.
According to Lim, compost systems only smell bad when they become deprived of oxygen, triggering an anaerobic chemical reaction that creates stinky gasses. Therefore, the compost should be mixed through every day, to allow fresh oxygen to reach every part of the mixture. The bag is made of felt, which helps by allowing water to wick up the sides thereby stopping puddles of water collecting at the bottom.
The next day when I add more kitchen scraps I notice that the mixture is already warm to the touch, a sure-fire sign that decomposition has begun.
My first batch of compost, ready to be mixed
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Two weeks later
Two months later
I actually look forward to tending to my strange little pet each day, and marvel at the great disappearing act: within 24 hours, handfuls of regular food scraps have simply vanished! The only evidence of use is that the compost bag is slowly but surely filling up. When it eventually does, I’ll need to take about half out, and let it cure before using. I have a couple of houseplants that will benefit from some compost, and I’ll scatter the rest on the garden of my building compound. The system is super easy to use and manage, creates zero stank, and takes up very little space in my apartment. All in all, I’m totally sold.
But aside from being a fun and interesting exercise, and assuaging my eco-guilt a little, really what’s the point of composting on such a small scale?
The ideal nutrient cycle
That smells good to me.
The OwnMade Indoor Composting Kit costs RMB 320 including delivery. Order a kit via Weidian (beta, below left QR code) or Yoopay (below right QR code), and add Lim (WeChat ID: dadan8) for updates on future workshops and events.
This post originally appeared on our sister publication the Beijinger.
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Images: Anna Pellegrin Hartley, courtesy of OwnMade, Markus Spiske (@markusspiske) on Unsplash
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Images: Anna Pellegrin Hartley, courtesy of OwnMade, Markus Spiske (@markusspiske) on Unsplash
Hot topics
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