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I was told you could dig a two foot trench and put all your garden waste in (not kitchen waste) and leave it over the winter to break down. Does anyone know if this is beneficial to the soil?
Yes, it makes a lovely, rich, water retentive bed for the following season. It's a method most often used for runner beans because in results in perfect conditions for them.
Leave the soil you dig out at one side and each time you add more peelings or whatever, cover them with a layer of the soil.
Runner bean beds should be done this way. It gives their roots plenty of organic material to get into.
and first line the base of the trench with loads of old newspapers , then you never need to worry about water as the layers of papers hold onto amazing amounts of moisture..
There are many & varied ways of composting, each with pros and cons. After 20 yrs of growing, I've settled on surface composting aka mulching (most stuff is simply chopped (with seckies) and dropped (on the soil surface). It's how forests do it
Kitchen scraps are a bit sludgy and messy, so they're wrapped up in newspaper, and go in the daleks.
All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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