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Composting on the Balcony: The Easy Way to Environmental Virtue

by Guest Post on December 14, 2009

in Frugal Container Gardening,Popular

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I am really excited to share this guest post about composting on a balcony, written by Hannah Katsman. Hannah shares techniques for saving time and money in the kitchen at CookingManager.com. A mother of six, she also writes on parenting and life in Israel at A Mother in Israel.

* * * * *

The first time I composted, my husband was excited to see the organic waste from our large family put to use. “We generate enough garbage to sell compost to the neighbors,” he remarked. So far we haven’t taken it to that scale.

Some people believe composting is a messy, smelly job not suitable for balcony gardeners. In truth, it’s no messier than regular gardening and the smell is easily contained. If it really stinks you are probably doing something wrong. And on your balcony, you probably don’t have to worry about animals getting into your compost, other than your pets.

Here is the equipment I used:

  • A covered container for collecting kitchen refuse, like a small garbage can.
  • A large bin for holding the compost pile. It can be old and cracks are fine too, as your compost will need air. You’ll also want some holes in the bottom for drainage.
  • Saucer. Keep this under the bin so your balcony will stay clean.
  • Soil or sand. Soil can be of lower quality than you usually use for your plants.
  • Wet organic material. Collect kitchen refuse including peels, seeds, rotten raw or cooked produce, crushed eggshells, coffee grinds, seeds, and other organic material. You can even add some strips of newspaper and the lint from your
    dryer.
  • Don’t include animal products with the exception of crushed eggshells.
  • Wet or dried leaves, branches and grass.
  • Water.

This is What I Did:

To make compost you need to encourage bacterial growth. Like all living things bacteria need air, water and food. The organic material serves as the food, and bacteria are everywhere. So your main job is to make air and water available to your decomposing material.

Begin collecting kitchen refuse. Place your garbage can on the counter and instruct everyone in the house to contribute suitable material. When the container gets full, bring the contents to the balcony and empty them into the larger bin.

Once you have a few inches of kitchen material in the bin, layer with an inch or two of the garden material. Cover with a layer of soil or sand. The soil and leaves keep the smell of the kitchen refuse from being overpowering. Wet it all with a generous amount of water. Drainage is important, because you do not want the compost to be
soaking in water. There’s no need to cover the pile unless you are worried that kids or animals will get into it.

Check your compost pile every few days, adding water when necessary. Each time you add kitchen refuse, top with a layer of plant material and soil and wet the pile. Continue every few days until the bin is full.

At this point you can leave it, just keeping it moist until the compost is ready after a few weeks or months. But if you want to hurry it along, stir and turn the mixture every week or so to expose the inside of the pile to fresh air. During the early stages, while the decomposing food is still smelly, you will want to cover the pile with a new layer of soil after stirring.

The compost is done when it is all uniformly black with the texture of a rough soil. It’s fine if you can still recognize bits of seeds or shells. Mix the compost in with your potting soil and enjoy the fruits of your labor!

Photo Credit: urbanwild

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{ 20 comments… read them below or add one }

Plant Avenue December 14, 2009 at 6:19 am

Great post! I love composting – it makes me feel like I’m giving back to the earth (and it makes me feel less guilty about wasted spoiled produce, lol ;) It really is so easy. Hopefully your post can encourage those who’ve never given it a try :)

Reply

melanie watts December 14, 2009 at 9:40 am

Even up here in northern Canada, where everything freezes for half the year, you can still continue to add stuff to your compost bin. The frost will break it down. In spring, after it thaws, most of it except for the top bit will be ready to use in your garden or pots. Wonderful post.

Reply

Hannah @CookingManager.com December 14, 2009 at 10:10 am

Thanks for the kind words.

Reply

Julie December 14, 2009 at 10:30 am

You can also add the cardboard from the inside of toilet rolls and also cardboard egg containers – just tear/cut them up into pieces. And if you’re kitchen scraps are large (eg watermelon rind), cut them into smaller pieces too

Reply

Julie December 14, 2009 at 10:30 am

You can also add the cardboard from the inside of toilet rolls and also cardboard egg containers – just tear/cut them up into pieces. And if your kitchen scraps are large (eg watermelon rind), cut them into smaller pieces too

Reply

Abigail December 14, 2009 at 10:46 am

so excited to see this! Thanks!

Reply

Jen December 14, 2009 at 10:48 am

so easy and doable. great post. i use a worm composter on my balcony from target. a little more spendy than the DIY kind here but a cool way to incorporate vermiculture.
http://exclusivegenerator.blogspot.com/2009/05/oh-shit-i-want.html
http://exclusivegenerator.blogspot.com/2009/08/lb-summer-luv.html

Reply

Bob December 14, 2009 at 12:49 pm

My partner and I made a compost bin this past August using a trash bin. If you drill holes in the lid and sides, you can use garden twist-ties secure the lid through the holes. This makes it easy to tip the barrel on its side and roll it around to mix it. We compost every scrap of paper, cardboard, vegetable scraps, fruit peels, egg shells, and used coffee grounds including the filters. One word of warning: avoid putting anything diseased in the bin like blighted tomatoes.

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Jen December 14, 2009 at 3:41 pm

FYI, i heard on a goodfood (KCRW) podcast today that so cal’ers are supposed to halt all food composting for awhile due to the very destructive fruit fly that is in our area. compost bins can become a nice breeding ground for them.

but after that….COMPOST ON!

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shari December 14, 2009 at 4:32 pm

Great post! I hadn’t really considered composting in an apartment but after reading this post, there’s no reason why I shouldn’t and every reason I should. One thing people might want to consider: citrus peels will slow down the rate of how quickly organic material turns into compost. [I don't know the chemistry behind this, but if someone does, please let me know; I'm really curious as to why.] If you are in a hurry, or have limited space and need to keep things moving along, leave the citrus peels out and your compost will be done that much sooner. [This was an accidental discovery made when I lived in a house with three compost bins and we noticed most things had decomposed nicely except for the citrus peels; we emptied two bins completely, restarted them, one without using any citrus peels in it and the compost in that bin was ready to use a full month sooner than the bin with peels.] Also, don’t bother adding fireplace ashes to compost; it doesn’t provide any value to the finished product. We turned our compost every other day regardless of time of year; temperatures in a good compost pile can easily reach 120 degrees F even in the winter in this area (San Francisco Bay Area).

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ilknur February 24, 2011 at 6:51 am

we briefly cook our citrus peels before adding them to the compost and they compost like any other thing :)

DS December 19, 2009 at 8:50 pm

We have rabbits, and I let them ‘pre-process’ our compost; that is, they get most of our kitchen garbage, and their poop goes into the compost bin. We get incredibly rich soil – thank to the bunnies!

Reply

Kaikit December 20, 2009 at 7:25 pm

Hi DS, how do your rabbits ‘pre-process’ your compost? Do u mean u feed them your kitchen waste?? >.<

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DS December 21, 2009 at 8:30 pm

Yes, they get (most of) the scraps that we set aside for compost, and then we scoop their poop into the compost bin. It disintegrates quicker, and is very rich.

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Miss Believer January 24, 2010 at 7:43 am

Great post! We’ve started doing this in my house now and it’s so good not be throwing away food waste. I don’t garden (but might start, we only have a concrete yard but your blog is so inspiring!) so we were thinking of just giving it to our neighbours who do. As long as it doesn’t go to waste!

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Meela March 1, 2010 at 4:59 am

This is exactly what I have been looking for! Thank you!! I just started composting on my balcony and I am enjoying every minute of it!! (Trying to encourage my family and friends to do it too..but that might be easier when I get my first harvest!) Its also more enjoyable eating fruits as I know that I will use ALL of it and not just the tasty bits :)

Your tips are great and I am excited about applying them. (especially about keeping the smell at bay as it is an apartment and the balcony is NOT in the west wing!!:))

Thanks again!

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Emi March 11, 2010 at 12:56 pm

Wonderful info! I actually just set up my very own balcony compost bucket today! Yay for compost!!!

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Fern March 11, 2010 at 9:47 pm

Emi–I’d love to hear how your compost bucket works out. Email me anytime fern at lifeonthebalcony.com

Paul - The Kind Little Blogger October 27, 2012 at 6:22 pm
Kate January 9, 2013 at 11:22 am

This sounds so awesome. Has anyone had any issue with stench? I worry about neighbors… Or is stench control a matter of method?

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