How to Start a Compost Pile in 4 Steps

Here’s an informative article from Mother Nature Network.

Composting can be intimidating, even though it’s really very simple. If you’re resisting the trend because it seems messy and gross, let us clear the air.

Now is the perfect time to start a compost pile. You can do it fancy or simple. Compost is the most important thing you can use in your garden to improve your land’s fertility (lawn, garden, and landscape), get rid of kitchen and yard waste efficiently, and save time and money. The only science involved is the science of decomposition — when things decompose, they turn into the most potent, valuable fertilizer on the market. Why buy it in the store when you can make it at home for free?

Step 1: Figure out where to put it, and if you need to put it in something.

If you are lucky to live on a nice patch of land, you can simply make a compost pile in a back corner somewhere. You don’t really need a container to make compost. However, if you live on a smaller patch of land, you might want to get a container to keep things looking tidy. We keep our compost containers right in the veggie patch, since that’s where most weeds and veggie leftovers go in, and where the good black gold comes out. If you live in the city, you probably will want a container. If you have an old trash can lying about, you can just cut off the bottom, and voilà! You have a composter.  Click to see Envirocycle Composter Video.

Step 2: Start collecting stuff to put on your pile.

From outside the house, you can put weeds (but not poison ivy please), leaves, old dying plant material, and garden waste. From inside the house, you can get a fancy compost bucket for your kitchen sink if you like, or you can just use a bucket or old container to collect kitchen waste.

Click to buy these pails.

Things to avoid putting on the compost pile include anything toxic, meat, bones, processed foods, dairy, and pet poop. But any other kitchen waste from vegetables or fruits, egg shells, coffee or tea grounds and even the shells of things like clams and crab are good, really good. Take this stuff out to your pile daily, otherwise it starts to decompose inside the house instead of outside the house, and might start to smell. Keep your waste container clean between loads, and you will have a clean-smelling, efficient composting operation set up in your household.

Step 3: Wait. Some people, compost connoisseurs, may have all sorts of elaborate rituals and techniques for speeding up the composting process. But it never fails if you just wait. Keep on adding to the top, and in a few months, at the bottom, you will have rich, dark, fertile compost to spread around. (That’s why a lot of composters have little doors at the bottom — no, it’s not for the composting gnomes to get in to do their job! … Or is it?)

Step 4: Use it.
If you don’t use it, you won’t lose it … it just waits for you. And even if you never use it, you’ve already done great work by keeping waste out of the public waste stream. However, compost loves to be used. You can spread it lightly on your lawn to make it greener. You can put it on your veggie patch to make it grow bigger, healthier, stronger veggies. You can put it on your flower beds to make your flowers more luscious and pest-resistant. You can sprinkle it around your houseplants or container plants. You can package it nicely and give it to friends and neighbors.

Compost is an organic gardener’s most powerful tool for raising healthy, pest-free, and beautiful gardens. Now there is nothing stopping you from getting started!

This article was reprinted with permission. For more from Maria Rodale, go to www.mariasfarmcountrykitchen.com.

 

5 DIY Crafts for Used Books

If you’ve got some old books lying around, check out some great crafts to reuse them for great home decor from Earth 911. There are some great ideas here…in fact you may just have to head to the Goodwill to get some books!

by Jennifer Berry
Published on January 17th, 2011
Old books

Books are not only a medium for thought-provoking rhetoric, but inspiring decor and spaces as well. Photo: Flickr/whereisyourmind

Literary purists be warned: We are about to destroy a few books in the name of home decor. Woe unto us! But it’s all for the greater good, and we’ve got some projects that will knock your spectacles off.

You have to admit that, no matter how much reading is a part of your life, there are probably a few titles sitting in the closet that haven’t seen the light of day in eons.

While book donation is always an excellent option for letting those old tomes find a new home (there’s probably a local charity, library, shelter or school that could use them), the cold winter months might give you an itch to craft while you’re stuck inside.

Sit back, grab a cup of tea and check out our top-five favorite ideas for reusing both hardcover and paperback books.

Vintage Paper Vases

Paper Vases by Country LivingThese smart vases add a cool twist on a traditional piece of home decor. Photo: CountryLiving.com

“A picture may be worth a thousand words, but words can create a pretty picture, too,” writes Bethany Lyttle for Country Living, where we find our first project. “That’s what stylist Paul Lowe set out to celebrate when he determined to make artful use of books and letters that, too often, end up in the trash.”

Well, you can’t put water or flowers in these vases, but they’re lovely enough to hold their own. This simple craft by Country Living requires a book, a pencil, scissors, cardboard, hot glue and some mad skills with a craft knife.

By essentially creating an outline of a typical vase shape and cutting it into a book whose covers have been removed, an “accordion” of paper forms the rounded shape.  It’s a simple, four-step process that might even have this novice crafter getting out the hot glue gun.

Following Country Living‘s example, try varying the size and shape of the vases you create for interesting arrangements and versatility.

Whimsical Wreath

Book Wreath by LindsayThese wreaths require only a few simple items and some time to create a. Photo: LivingWithLindsay.com

Don’t panic: Yes, the holidays are over, and no, this wreath isn’t wintry in the slightest.

This beautiful project comes from the creative pages of the DIY home decor blog, Living with Lindsay. She was inspired to make her own, thrifty wreath design after seeing similar wreaths priced at $40 a pop at a city-wide garage sale.

“The vendor told me that she made them sitting in front of the television,” she writes. “That’s my kind of crafting.” That’s our kind of crafting, too!

For a change on the project, Lindsay recommends trying magazines or sheet music as well, which would look equally enchanting. Like the project above, simple items like a glue gun, foam wreath ring and a bit of a craft paint make this project a snap.

Check out Lindsay’s tutorial, which has both written and a video tutorial.

Pretty Purse

Purse from Book Covers Country LivingWhile these little purses may not work for the everyday grind, we love the idea of taking them out for a strol…once the weather warms, of course. Photo: CountryLiving.com

As many of the projects in this story deal with the actual pages of a book, we thought it best to toss in an idea about how to reuse the covers as well. Brought to us again by the creative minds of Country Living, this purse tutorial is one of the best out there.

Ranking at more of an intermediate level, this craft will help you create a cute clutch in 11 steps or less (or more, if you’re this writer…), according to writer Barbara McNamara, whose easy guide will have you with a new bag in hand in no time.

We recommend having a book in mind before you go out to buy the handle kit and liner fabric, as you will want these items to coordinate through patterns or colors. Don’t forget to have your iron handy as well, to help the fabric lay straight as you cut and measure.

Also, larger, hardcover books will work better to provide space for all the various and sundries you’re bound to toss into this particular purse.

Literary Table Legs

Table Legs from BooksTake your craft skills to the next level and revamp your sitting room table. Try finding old encyclopedias for an easy way to collect more uniform books.Photo: Instructables/Jessyratfink

Before you even have to ask: Yes, you will need a tabletop for these legs as well. That comes separately.

But, before you dismiss the project, just take a look at how cool (read: cultured and enlightened) you will look having a table built, literally, out of pure knowledge.

This project brings in the heavy machinery: drills, goggles and steel rods are a few of the items you will need to build the foundations of your new table.

Instructables pro Jessyratfink writes that the number of hardcover books you need will be determined by how tall you want the table, and it’s best to have similar sizes throughout.

“Once you know how tall you want them to be, try to get an average thickness on the books you’re considering and buy just a few more books than you’ll need,” she says. “Once they’re compressed you might find you need an extra book to help them line up!”

Super Secret Hideout

Secret Hideout by Aud1073cHYou never know when a secret stash of cash or treats will come in handy! Photo: How To Do Stuff/Aud1073cH

Hey, we saved the best for last. No matter if you are 8 or 80, everyone needs a secret place to stash valuables, candy, data, childhood objects and the like.

Hardback books work best in this scenario to provide support for your belongings and a rigid cutting surface.

Also, if you have in mind what you’d like to stash in said hideout, take a moment to select a book that will fairly accommodate these valuables. You won’t cut out all of the pages in the book, so keep that in mind as well.

The How to Do Stuff tutorial gives step-by-step instructions that look relatively easy to follow – just make sure to allot time for various drying cycles throughout the project.

Which one are you going to try?

 

Fish Tanks Made From iMacs

All I can say is WOW!!! These are Super Cool!!

by Alexis Petru
Published on October 18th, 2011

iMac, AppleJake Harms recycles the iconic original iMac computer into aquariums that he sells online. Photos: Jake Harms

Before the sleek and portable MacBook Air, iPhone and iPad, there was the original Apple iMac, released in 1998 and available in an array of vibrant colors or “flavors” like grape and strawberry.

When Jake Harms was faced with disposing of an old iMac at work, he felt there had to be a better use for the iconic colorful computer. Inspired by a photo of a Macquarium – a fish aquarium built into an old Mac computer – he spent several years developing the perfect curved fish tank to replace the iMac’s curved cathode ray tube screen.

Harms now sells his iMacquariums online to Apple fans and fish enthusiasts looking for a unique, “retro” way to house their finned friends.

iMac, Apple

Harms obtains the dead desktop computers from local recyclers: The recyclers donate working iMacs to schools or families and send the non-working models to Harms. He spends about two hours polishing each iMac with a high-speed buffer to remove any nicks and marks, making the computers look shiny and new.

After the cathode ray tube screens are removed, each iMac case is fitted with a 3.5-gallon tank with a built-in filter and lights.

iMac, Apple

While the iMacquarium’s tank is too small for typical goldfish, it’s spacious enough to accommodate 1-3 betta fish, fancy guppies, dwarf frogs, red claw crabs or other small tropical fish.

The recycled aquariums are priced at $250, including U.S. shipping, and, of course, are offered in an assortment of fun colors: blue, aqua, white, smoke, red, flower power and blue dalmatian. International shipping is also available.

Have a broken iMac and feeling crafty? Harms now sells a $175 make-your-own-iMacquarium kit, complete with fish tank, hardware and video instructions, to help anyone recycle their old desktop into a distinctive home for your aquatic pets.

iMac, Apple

However, Harms recommends that DIYer’s have a professional remove and dispose of the cathode ray tube screen, which contains hazardous chemicals and thousands of volts of electricity.