I thought I'd make a big hot compost heap in the polytunnel which would add a bit of warmth but my husband said I should find out if it's a good idea - ie would it harm the plastic, encourage disease etc. Any thoughts?
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I would have thought that the composting process would be sped up.. My only con would be that it would take up valuable growing space. If you can justify this then I see no reason why any harm could be done. It may smell a bit though!
ChrisMy new website for allotment beginners www.theallotmentshed.co.uk
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Your husband could be onto something. The Victorians used to do "hot-bedding" and they're all dead now
All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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Originally posted by Aberdeenplotter View PostHigh temperatures are needed to kill the pathogens that cause disease
However, a lot of people add cold, fresh, unrotted horse/pigeon/chicken muck direct to their plots. It's not just high temps that kill bacteria, it's also length of time: for instance, 99% of human fecal bacteria will die in just 21 days in winter
Bacteria and viruses cannot penetrate undamaged vegetable skins. Furthermore, pathogens are not taken up in the roots of plants and transported to other portions of the plant.30 However, pathogens can survive on the surfaces of vegetables, especially root vegetables
This explains it all a lot better than I couldAll gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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When I made my new raised beds in my tunnel, I piled in loads of straw/chicken/duck poo, and grass clippings and put the topsoil on top (couldn't afford enough topsoil to fill the beds entirely).
The resulting beds were 'hot' a couple of inches into the topsoil. Now the stuff underneath has rotted down, I'll be piling un-rotted horse poo on top of the beds I'm not growing in over winter, for the same effect.
My only query with your plan is that, as Chris says, you'll be taking up valuable growing space!
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Originally posted by OverWyreGrower View PostWhen I made my new raised beds in my tunnel, I piled in loads of straw/chicken/duck poo, and grass clippings and put the topsoil on top (couldn't afford enough topsoil to fill the beds entirely).
The resulting beds were 'hot' a couple of inches into the topsoil. Now the stuff underneath has rotted down, I'll be piling un-rotted horse poo on top of the beds I'm not growing in over winter, for the same effect.
My only query with your plan is that, as Chris says, you'll be taking up valuable growing space!Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better...Albert Einstein
Blog - @Twotheridge: For The Record - Sowing and Growing with a Virgin Veg Grower: Spring Has Now Sprung...Boing! http://vvgsowingandgrowing2012.blogs....html?spref=tw
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Our tunnel is huge - 60 x 30 feet and does not have much in it yet - just gone up. I've used left over plastic to make tunnels inside the tunnel where I have some seedlings which might not be too late - salad leaves and thought I could make the compost under there to raise the temp - I could even put a table over the top of the heap to get the direct heat and not waste space.
I confess a compost geek and have a supply of spent hops from the brewary and seaweed from the sea mixed half and half to a cubic meter heats up after 3 days and stays hot for 3 weeks.
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Be careful - you don't want it too hot... even in the autumnal rain and windy weather this weekend, my tunnel got up to 25 degrees in weak sunshine (and we're in a notoriously windy and rainy spot, right on the coast) ... if you've got a tunnel-in-a-tunnel, you could very easily burn young plants, never mind if you've got a 'hot bed' as well...
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