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7 Easy Ways to Compost Kitchen Scraps in Your Garden! 🌱

2024-10-26 Howto & Style
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Epic Gardening
Epic Gardening
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Description

Hoselink x Epic Gardening Giveaway: https://www.hoselink.com/pages/win As gardeners, we know not all plant parts make it to the kitchenβ€”many head straight to the compost pile. But even the scraps that do make it indoors often end up in the landfill, which isn't ideal! In today’s video, @jacquesinthegarden and I share 7 easy ways to repurpose kitchen scraps to enrich your soil, reduce waste, and boost garden productivity. From worm towers to bokashi buckets, these tips turn everyday waste into garden gold. IN THIS VIDEO β†’ SUPPORT EPIC GARDENING β†’ Shop: https://growepic.co/shop β†’ Seeds: https://growepic.co/botanicalinterests LEARN MORE β†’ All Our Channels: https://growepic.co/youtube β†’ Blog: https://growepic.co/blog β†’ Podcast: https://growepic.co/podcasts β†’ Discord: https://growepic.co/discord β†’ Instagram: https://growepic.co/insta β†’ TikTok: https://growepic.co/tiktok β†’ Pinterest: https://growepic.co/pinterest β†’ Twitter: https://growepic.co/twitter β†’ Facebook: https://growepic.co/facebook β†’ FB Group: https://growepic.co/fbgroup TIMESTAMPS 00:00 - Intro 00:27 - Burying Scraps 01:26 - Worm Tower 03:19 - Home Compost Machine 04:08 - Hoselink 05:21 - Bokashi 07:48 - Using Chickens 08:48 - Simple Compost Pile DISCLAIMER Epic Gardening occasionally links to goods or services offered by vendors to help you find the best products to care for plants. Some of these may be affiliate links, meaning we earn a small commission if items are purchased. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. More info on our process: https://www.epicgardening.com/disclaimer/

Top Comments (10)

@deboz8793 2024-10-26

I adopted a method my Mom had been doing for years. I bury the kitchen scraps into containers throughout the year, since I garden in containers. No fuss, no muss - and the soil is enriched by the next planting season. And if I’m lucky, I’ll get volunteer veggies in the spring/summer.

156 8 replies
@smpbiker9233 2024-10-26

My friend always took her scraps from her kitchen and swirled them with water in the blender. If you saw the results of what she poured it on then you would also be convinced it is an awesome idea. It's going to instantly make it all readily useable.

129 6 replies
@margakat 2024-10-27

I live in a small one bedroom apartment in NYC and don't have a garden. I have tons of houseplants and have managed to grow some herbs in my window sills and from pots I have hanging off the bars of my window. Composting for myself is not all that viable. However, NYC has recently implemented a composting program. Apartment buildings now have to have a food scrap bin that gets picked up once a week. There are also food scrap bins on various corners that can be opened with an app and are picked up often. There had been composting at community gardens too, but our piece of crap Mayor shut that down. I love that I can collect my scraps in my little bin and then take it out the the building's bin. While I'm sure there are issues, I'm happy that my scraps are not going into landfills.

64
@jeannamcgregor9967 2024-10-27

I actually dedicated an old blender to chewing up food scraps before composting or giving to the worms. But then, I'm retired and have the time to do silly stuff like this...

37 3 replies
@M.davila89 2024-10-28

I've been watching you since I took up gardening during covid. I finally bought my first house last month and I'm soo excited to get my own garden in the ground somewhere permanently. Just entered the giveaway, fingers crossed, and thank you! 🀞

31 1 replies
@epicgardening 2024-10-27

Here's the giveaway link! https://www.hoselink.com/pages/win

25 6 replies
@ntcssj 2024-10-27

From bok choy and onions to carrot tops etc, if there's about an inch around the root area that I'm not gonna eat, I plop them in the garden to see if they'll grow. With this method, I've never bought green onion seeds or any other type of onion for gardening, as I have so many that I've gotten to grow from left over scraps. (And also used the onions to block holes that rats have dug in some of our garden beds.) If the plant isn't able to continue to grow in the garden, it just becomes quick compost in that small area I planted it. A win either way! I also do a similar method that Jacques shared with the holes in the ground bin, but instead keep it above ground and only have holes in the bottom of the bucket and around the bottom edge. This way there's more space in our relatively small gardening space for the plant roots, and the container can be moved around every so often when a different area could use a fertilizer refresh.

24
@mkc0005 2024-10-26

I tried the worm tower idea last year. But here in south TX all that turned out to be was a huge neon sign for fire ants to move in.

23 2 replies
@victoriao1828 2024-10-26

I would have watched the video without the teaser for a giveaway, but not being able to find it was a disappointment.

15
@tingram886 2024-12-31

I did this 2 years ago during the winter. My tomatoes were the best and biggest crop I have ever had. My tomatoes grew up 8 feet tall. πŸ˜‹ 😊 amazing results. 😊

5

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