How to compost: recycle waste and improve your garden

Compost is a powerful fertiliser and soil conditioner, which will give your gardening a boost. Learn all about how to make it and use it.

Woman is emptying the bucket filled with lawn grass cuttings and shredded branches

Why should I make and use compost in my garden?

Home composting has a lot to recommend it. For a start, making your own compost will save money as it reduces the amount of fertiliser you need. Even better, it represents the ultimate in low-energy recycling: the faded blooms and cuttings from your garden are broken down and fed back to the soil, supplying it with precious nutrients. A single handful of compost contains around ten billion organisms, and using it in your garden guarantees improved soil structure and well-nourished earth. That means plants that are more resistant to pests and which grow quicker.

From waste to humus

Composting transforms organic waste matter into decomposed compost that contains plenty of humus. Soil that is rich in humus supports better growing for the long term, because humus promotes effective retention of water and nutrients, as well as contributing to a crumbly soil texture that plants love. A healthy compost heap provides the right conditions for this transformation process to run efficiently.

What is a composter?

A composter is a wooden or plastic container used to produce compost. “Quick” or “hot” compost bins are special thermally insulated containers, usually made from plastic, which efficiently maintain a higher temperature to accelerate the decomposition process. Compost bins usually have one or multiple extraction flaps so that you can access the compost easily when it’s ready to use. They are available in different sizes and for different budgets.

What types of compost bin are available?

A plastic compost container in the corner of a green spot between pots and plants.

Hot compost bin

  • Accelerates decomposition.
  • Produces finished compost very quickly – in around four to six months.
  • No unpleasant odours.
  • Needs turning every four weeks.
  • Like all composters, should be installed in direct contact with the soil.
  • Protects compost from drying out and getting cold.
  • Requires a sunny position.
  • Minimal air supply.
A wooden compost bin with leaf bin alongside, in front of a hedge

Wooden compost bin

  • Can be easily built by hand.
  • Should be installed in a sheltered position.
  • System requires two boxes – one for filling and one for composting.
  • Must be turned at least once a year.
  • Wooden compost bins are susceptible to rot.

How to make and maintain compost

Making good-quality compost doesn’t require a lot of fancy equipment. You can do it if you have some space in your garden, a shop-bought or homemade compost bin and our tips on proper composting techniques.

Compost bin site

You should position your compost bin so that it’s easy to get a wheelbarrow to it and the bin is directly on soil, not on tiles or stone – it’s important that the substrate is water-permeable. The area should ideally be shaded and sheltered from wind; under a tree or shady bush is ideal.

Container material

We recommend using wood or plastic for your compost container. These materials are durable and can withstand external influences for a long time. The composting process requires air, so you should choose – or build – a container with one side open. If you have a large garden, we recommend setting up two or three compost bins for an efficient system: you can add organic waste to one bin while the compost in another is in its rest phase. Small composters are available, so there’s nothing to stop you from making compost on a terrace or balcony.

Materials and tools required for composting

  • Mature compost or soil
  • Quick-composting bin or compost container
  • Wheelbarrow
  • Shovel and spade
  • Pitchfork
Open compost heaps in front of a green shrub, with a wheelbarrow and trees nearby

How to use your compost

Sieving

Before using compost in your garden, you need to make sure your compost is fine enough to add and eliminate any larger pieces. Set up a garden riddle or soil sieve at an angle and shovel compost through it. This will remove the little sticks and stones and other impurities, leaving only ready-to-use compost.

Applying

After six to twelve months, the fresh compost will be suitable for use as an organic fertiliser. The nutrient content of your compost is not easy to determine exactly as it depends on what you put in the composting pile. With that in mind, shrubs and less demanding plants may be fertilised exclusively with compost, but elsewhere we recommend you reduce the fertiliser application rate by 50% or so, depending on how hungry the respective plant is.

Application rate

Apply around 3 to 4 l per square metre – that’s around a spadeful. If you’re using your compost as a soil conditioner, it must have first matured for a year or more; this means it is further broken down and will contain fewer nutrients, but will also be much richer in stable humus that permanently improves the condition of your soil.

A garden corner with flower bed, hedge and a wooden composter and leaf bin

How to keep your composter working well

The principles of creating and maintaining a composting process are simple enough, and with a little extra advice you can maximise the results.

Use the right composting mix

Always mix coarser waste, such as shrub cuttings, with moist vegetable scraps and dry, nutrient-rich waste such as wood cuttings or foliage. Don’t use large quantities of the same material in one go as this can stop the mixture from decomposing evenly. 

Consider the composition of your waste

In addition to air and water, the compost-making microorganisms in your bin or heap also need organic carbon (C) and nitrogen (N). For best results you should aim to maintain a carbon to nitrogen ratio between 25:1 and 30:1.

Moist green kitchen waste and young plant cuttings are full of nitrogen, whereas dry matter – such as twigs, wood cuttings, autumn leaves or straw – is rich in carbon. Grass cuttings decompose quickly, so you should add it to your compost pile in small quantities, and supplement it with a handful of bonemeal to support the decomposition process. Dry twigs and branches are also known as “brown waste”, and the smaller they are shredded before adding to your compost bin, the more quickly they will decompose.

What can go into my composter?

You can compost organic, biodegradable matter, such as garden waste or kitchen vegetable scraps. The more varied the waste, the richer your compost will be.

What you can compost

  • Bedding from small pets
  • Egg shells
  • Coffee grounds, tea bags, filters
  • Newspaper, kitchen roll
  • Pot plants, cut flowers
  • Fruit and lawn cuttings in small quantities only
  • Weeds, but only without seeds

Shredding plant cuttings and garden waste

Twigs and branches from hedges and shrubs are suitable for composting, along with other plant waste, but you should shred them first. This increases the surface area for microbes which means the garden waste will decompose more quickly. We recommend you use a garden shredder to make the job easy; these use blades to effortlessly chop your garden waste.

Compostables at a glance

Use the right ratio of matter to keep your compost pile healthy. Putting in compostable matter in the right proportions will ensure your composter contains the right mixture of oxygen, nitrogen and moisture to effectively create a compost rich in both humus and nutrients.

Brown:green

25:1

Brown matter Green matter
Straw Grass cuttings
Twigs Vegetable scraps
Cardboard Fruit scraps
Paper Wilted flowers
Leaves Manure
Wood chips Coffee grounds
Do not compost:

Cooked food remnants
Baked goods
Dairy products and meat
Weeds with roots
Weeds with seeds
Diseased plant cuttings

Waste unsuitable for composting

  • Grease and oil
  • Food remnants of animal origin (meat, cheese, bones)
  • Baked goods
  • Wood ash
  • Dog and cat waste
  • Vacuum cleaner bags
  • Magazines
  • Stone, leather, metal
  • Glass and metal
  • Tetra Paks

Composting made easy

A woman wearing ear protection and gloves feeds a branch into a STIHL GHE 250 S electric garden shredder

Garden shredders: the fast way to perfect fertiliser

Pruning is important for healthy trees and plants, but the garden waste can mount up. Make use of it by adding it to your compost bin.

We recommend you first use a STIHL garden shredder to process the trimmings, as this reduces the volume and chops up the plant waste so it can rapidly decompose into high-quality fertiliser. To further accelerate the process, you can use the shredder to prepare other waste you plan to compost too, including spent flowers, fruit and vegetable scraps and autumn leaves.

 

 

Composting autumn leaves. If you want to add fallen autumn leaves to your compost, you can simply collect them up using your lawn mower. It’s best to mix the leaves with fresh grass cuttings, as the dry leaves help to ventilate the grass cuttings and prevent rotting. What’s more, the leaves add a carbon-rich component to the nitrogen-heavy green plant waste – a mix that is key to successful composting.

If you have a large garden, you shouldn’t add the leaves to your compost bin all at once, and can instead create a simple leaf store. Just use posts and wire mesh to create an aerated bin for your collected leaves. You can add these to your compost gradually throughout the year.

 

Compost problems

Your composting may not go perfectly at first. There are a few potential problems that may crop up, but they are usually simple to solve.

Smelly compost

A rotten-smelling compost pile is often caused by waterlogging, most likely from adding too many wet ingredients. Unfortunately, you have to start again from scratch, as there’s no rescuing rotten compost. Ensure you are using the right ratio of waste and layering it properly.

Mouldy compost

Mould spores are present in all garden soils and are completely natural. However, if you notice a serious mould infestation, you may have added too much damp matter to your compose bin. Try to rearrange your compost and thoroughly mix the dry matter with damper material; the mould should then start to subside.

Compost is not ready

Mature compost needs time. Depending on the season and temperature, it may take six to twelve months before your various ingredients become nutrient-rich humus. Compost does need rest time but you also need to turn it or dig it up occasionally. If the volume of your compost pile has reduced by around a third, you should reach for your shovel. Turning the heap ventilates your compost and accelerates the maturing process.

Summary: how to compost

  • Compost made from garden and kitchen waste is a nutrient-rich natural fertiliser for your plants
  • Quick compost bins are faster to make compost and more compact, but also more expensive than wooden compost bins or open compost heaps
  • Start your compost pile with layers: the bottom layer should be coarse shredded matter followed by garden soil or compost
  • Cover the compost and leave it to mature for nearly a year
  • Make sure you use the right ratio of carbon-rich brown and nitrogen-rich green matter (25:1)
  • Add to the compost pile regularly
  • Food remnants of animal origin, baked goods, grease, oil and inorganic matter are not suitable for composting
  • If your compost starts rotting, you need to start again. Mouldy compost benefits from having dry matter added