How To Turn Leaves Into Compost

Estimated reading time: 7 minutes

Stop paying for compost and start making your own. Learn how to turn yard waste into nutrient-rich soil with this easy step-by-step guide.

How to Make Compost at Home A Step-by-Step Guide
How to Make Compost at Home: A Step-by-Step Guide

Making Compost From Leaves Is Not Hard To Do

Let me show you how easy it is to turn your yard waste into compost so you can stop paying for it yearly.

Often, we overlook gold just because it’s dirty or too grimy of a job, but why buy city compost when you can make it yourself?

It’s that time of year when the leaves have already turned color, and there’s a good splattering over most people’s lawns that have fallen.

So is now the time to save some money?

Sure it is, and here’s what I do to save some money this spring so I can use my garden budget for other purchases.

Understanding Compost

What is Compost?

Compost is organic matter that has been decomposed in a process called composting.

This process recycles various organic materials otherwise regarded as waste products and produces a soil conditioner.

Compost is rich in nutrients. Wikipedia

Raking The Leaves For Compost

What do I do to save money in the Fall?

I take what I have and turn it into gold.

Every year, I collect the leaves from the trees in plastic bags, wet them, and tie them up with a couple of holes punched in the sides.

I store them over winter down the side of the house (mainly because my compost heap is already entire); you could start compost heap number two if you like, depending on the size of your garden.

In the spring, I’ll empty roughly two-thirds of the compost bin, pots, and baskets for use around the garden. 

I’ll then re-fill the compost bin with the leaves from the garbage bags interspersed with other roughage.

The half-rotten mixture will take no time to rot down once the weather warms up, and you’ll have gorgeous soil.

Hanging Basket with Flowers 2012

Purpose Of Bagging Leaves

Why should you put leaves in plastic garbage bags?

I don’t throw the leaves away in brown yard waste bags because of the number of nutrients they’ll add back into the garden for next year.

If you’re able to grow your vegetables or just like gardening, you’ll appreciate the benefits of recycling waste products from your garden and your house.

We try to throw as many fruit and veg odds and ends in the compost bin rather than the “green bin” as it will add “Free” goodness to the garden.

If you’ve got a wood-burning stove or fireplace, you can add the cold ashes to the heap, too.

Just remember that ashes will be high in calcium carbonate, reducing the acidic level of the soil.

If you’re unsure what type of soil you’ve got, get a test kit.

My soil is acidic because the Rhododendron grows like a weed, and the Hydrangea has a blue flower hue.

Have you just finished taking your yearly hanging baskets apart? 

Here’s what you do now.

Put the compost and annuals back into the compost bin/heap.

Compost bin with organic waste in the top

I remember when I was younger, my gran used to be able to grow an enormous amount of fruit and vegetables in her garden without fail.

The soil was dark and fertile, probably because her house was a Victorian semi, and over the 90-year lifespan, everything bio-degradable was thrown onto the garden.

When the city compost truck comes to collect your leaves or even your green organic bin weekly, what do you think they do with it?

They might not use it themselves, but they do sell it. Why?

Someone’s making money from it; how?

They let it rot down and sell it back to you in a bag; how’s that for a money-maker?

Yes, that city compost you buy is from the leaves you give them, which they sell to a company. 

Brilliant.

Oh, and we also pay the city workers to pick up the leaves that we buy back.

Beautiful Dark Soil Made In Your Compost Bin

Rotted down to good compost at the bottom

If you add a good mixture of ingredients into your compost heap and let it rot down properly, you’ll have something just as good, if not better, than you can buy in the store.

You can buy soil for $0.99 a bag, but it’s terrible. Trust me, I bought it and regretted it.

What I get from the compost heap is top quality, well-rotted compost that would cost you $4.00-$5.00 a bag, but I get it for free.

I got inspired by a man called Alan Titchmarsh, a horticulturist who ran a TV program on the BBC (The Beeb) called “Gardeners World” but he also went back to basics to teach/inspire a new younger generation with another TV show.

How To Make Good Garden Compost

ingredients for a good garden compost are:

  • Annual weeds
  • Tops of Perennial Weeds
  • Spent bedding plants (yearly flowers that have finished)
  • Uncooked vegetable peelings, crushed eggshells and teabags
  • Grass clippings (they’ll add nitrogen)
  • Soft hedge trimmings, soft prunings, and spent flowers (from the deadheading)
  • Dead Leaves
  • Shredded woody stems
  • Shredded paper, cotton, and wool fabrics

I probably wouldn’t throw in meat, fish, and other cooked foods for fear of being invaded by the ubiquitous raccoon.

Don’t get me wrong, the furry guy will love you to death, but your neighbours will be more than mildly annoyed.

Inside the compost bin

For a new compost heap/bin, add a couple of shovelfuls of fresh manure from sheep or horses to get it started.

Once you’ve got it going, add waste and water to keep it wet. If it dries out (especially in the summer), it will stop.

Collecting Rain Water

I usually add water from the rain barrel as rainwater is a natural source of nitrates (a form of nitrogen) plants require to grow.

An alternative to adding nitrogen to your compost is adding nettles.

Consequently, an excellent homemade plant fertilizer can be made from the common stinging nettle Urtica dioica due to its large amount of nitrogen.

Nettles are native to North America as well as Europe and Asia.

Hard Work Equals Big Savings

If you use a rake, because rakes are cheaper than leaf blowers and cost zero, you’ll get some exercise out of the deal, too.

A bit of hard work is always more beneficial than convenience.

“There is no substitute for hard work” Thomas Alva Edison…yes, the inventor.

An old saying from northern England is entirely appropriate at this point, “Where’s there’s muck, there’s brass.” Quite simply, where there’s crap, there’s money!

Discussion: Do you compost your leaves in the Fall?

Please leave me your comments below.

Mr.CBB

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