Create compost - Earthwatch Europe

Create compost

Compost heaps are living habitats that provide food and shelter for all kinds of wildlife, including earthworms, other invertebrates, amphibians, and hedgehogs. Here’s how to create compost.

Create compost

Open compost bins and heaps make attractive nesting sites for hedgehogs. Cold-blooded creatures, such as slow worms and grass snakes, often visit such sites to take advantage of the heat released by decomposition.

Composting your garden waste is free and easy to do, producing compost for your garden and providing benefits to wildlife.

There are many ways to compost, so choose one or more methods that suit your outdoor space, both in terms of size and aesthetics. The main three types are:

Garden compost bin for recycling kitchen food and garden waste including fruit and vegetable peelings, tea bags and egg shells.
A wooden compost bin is situated outdoors in a garden setting. The bin is filled with a mixture of decomposing organic materials, including soil, leaves, and small pieces of fruit or plant matter. The structure is made of sturdy wood with slats on the sides for ventilation. Surrounding the bin are green plants and grass, indicating a natural, outdoor environment.
A close-up view of a garden spade partially buried in rich, dark soil. The spade has a metallic blade and a blue-handled shaft, indicating it is being used for digging or tilling the earth. The surrounding soil appears moist and fertile, with some texture visible, suggesting recent gardening activity.

You can buy compost bins made from slatted wood or you can make your own using wooden pallets. The compost bin should ideally be at least 1m x 1m x 1m to allow the heap to heat up, and also be resting on soil.

Temperatures can reach as high as 50 – 60°C. Putting carpet over the top of an open compost bin can help retain heat and speed up the decomposition process.

Compost bins need a mix of ‘green nitrogen-rich’ and ‘brown carbon-rich’ matter. The finer you shred the material before putting it into the compost heap, the quicker it will rot.

  • Green matter includes vegetable peelings, grass cuttings and plant material.
  • Brown matter typically comprises of cardboard, newspaper, shredded paper, egg boxes, dead leaves and wood chips.
  • Don’t add meat, cooked food, dairy products or pet waste; if you avoid these you are much less likely to get rats visiting your heap!

Layering green and brown matter as much as possible will result in great compost.

Turning or forking over the compost speeds up the process, but isn’t essential, and be careful if you do so as many animals may be living in the heap.

Within a year, you can spread the rich, fine compost over your soil and anything that is not fully rotten can simply go back on the compost heap.

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