View allAll Photos Tagged Composting

Trash Macro Mondays.

It would take an organic farmer to post such a sign on his boundary fence; I wonder what grows beyond the native bush on the other side of that barbed wire.

Castle Hills Thonock Gainsborough.

A little fantasy fun after making squash soup

Good for compost, I understand.

In your garden, pull up any dead plants and lay them on the ground around healthy plants. You can also chop them up and mix them into the soil.

 

While leaves changing color in the fall are dying, they are not dead. A cold snap will kill the leaves the same as it will on the leaves of most your other plants.

Time to get that Composting Bin started.

Eskilstuna, Sweden 2011

We were surprised to look out to see these sweet ladies in our yard. One of them was very interested in our compost!

 

I feel terrible for wildlife lately because the air quality is horrendous due to the Canadian wildfires. For several days it’s been in the “unhealthy” and “very unhealthy” range, with a constant haze in the air. While we have the option of closing windows & filtering our air, they do not.

This was a family friends' garden centre after the final days of trade. It's now demolished.

Superb Fairy-wrens were particularly observant and appeared already while I was busy with the compost and they seemed to be working alongside me.

 

(Malurus cyaneus)

We’ve been taking steps to impact the earth less and minimize our waste, such as reducing our plastic use and purchasing less. One thing I’ve been wanting to do for a while is to start composting again (we weren’t very successful with it several years ago), and after researching it for a while, we finally started. The bin works great for this environment because we tend to get a lot of dampness & humidity here. Plus, it’s made from untreated cedar instead of plastic. The pail is for keeping on our kitchen counter and is perfect, complete with a filter to keep the smells in the pail.

The green waste collected from households and commercial gardeners is wetted down and put into these massive rooms on one side of the building. It quickly starts to decompose and the temperature rises to around 60C.

 

All this heat causes steam to escape from the hanger doors.

Dunghill with rising sun

Compost Pile.

 

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Steve.D.Hammond.

Explore #129.

  

View Large on Black.

 

This is what our compost looks like at the moment. It proves that the compost soil is excellent, and that the garden care is somewhat neglected :)

 

Soundtrack: youtube.com/watch?v=doYNBHE8Yes

 

Nikon D300, 18-200@200mm, 1/30s, f/6.5, ISO 320. Treatment: shady white balance, increased saturation, added vignette. (DSC_1761)

Natures way of Recycling its self.

Composting a pomegranate.

 

This week's FlickrFriday theme is: #PaintItBlack

Le thème de ce FlickrFriday est: #Peint le en noir

O tema desta FlickrFriday é: #Pinte de preto

本次 FlickrFriday 主題: #把它涂黑

FlickrFriday-Thema der Woche: #Mal es schwarz

El tema de FlickrFriday es: #Pintarlo negro

 

P2148105.

I thought the snow on the lid of this compost bin looks like the radioactivity symbol.

 

The Flickr Lounge-Made Of Wood

 

These are wood pallets we got from a local business to use for our compost bins. The Rhubarb is growing on the left side and a volunteer Delicata Squash is growing in front of the bin.

Four months ago I took this picture because I felt so captivated by the ordinary details I found in these pieces of peppers I had sliced that were to be discarded. Even though this would become compost material I really appreciated the colors, shapes, and light I saw here. I find “real” food/fresh produce so beautiful and interesting in appearance and love how I feel so thankful and excited when thinking about the nutrients and benefits fresh produce provides for our bodies. I’m thankful I took the time to capture what I saw.

The largest of the abandoned barges I photographed on this day. The wood timbers are so substantial that they partially turn to compost long before they totally disintegrate. Some of the barges have a thicket of shrubbery growing on top; this one had smaller plants on the side.

 

The original swimming pool is still intact on the grounds of the circa-1910 Cornish Estate near Cold Spring, N.Y. There had to have been a great view of the Hudson Highlands down the slope before all these trees sprouted.

These might as well be wallpaper

Nature Recycling, what it made.

The Trevor Carpenter 2018 Photo Challenge

 

WEEK 15: APRIL 2008/2010 FLASHBACK – ENTROPY

 

We keep this little metal pail in our kitchen to throw out vegetable matter for compost.

 

I opened it today and thought, since the stuff hadn't decayed all that much, the variety of colors and textures were pretty cool. I thought it would make for an interesting photo for Entropy.

I've sunk to new lows in trying to get some pictures taken during the lock down. This is the contents of my backyard composter.

Not the tidiest of gardens, it takes a lot of work keeping it this scruffy LOL.

We get a lot of wildlife though and the compost gets used up every year. Squizzy loves this bit as it is close to the trees and he/she can make his/her getaway. The snow has now gone from the back garden, not so with the front.

In my garden Stafford UK 23rd January 2023

Remains of Mid-40s Chevrolet coupe permanently residing alongside an abandoned logging road.

They’re growing in a pile of old hay and ruminant 💩.

I peeked inside and saw a well 'cooked', well sifted, taller than me pile of compost. Brown gold! I said, darn, I didn't bring my bolt cutters!!!

Wastes turned to fertilizers

Stew and dumplings for lunch today. So much rain that going out to get a photo wasn't an option.

 

11/365/2023

kitchen compost turned into garden soil.

Leitz Summicron 2.0 40mm

Ptecticus trivittatus

Truck Thursday

 

Stu ordered a large load of compost. We use it all over the garden. It is very rich in nutrients.

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