Free compost given to Hyndburn residents as a thank you for recycling (From Lancashire Telegraph)
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Free compost given to Hyndburn residents as a thank you for recycling
8:00pm Tuesday 24th July 2012 in Burnley
FREE compost is to be given away by a borough council as a thank-you to residents for recycling.
Hyndburn Council said it was grateful to the thousands of Hyndburn residents who regularly compost their garden waste.
The borough council have teamed up with Lancashire County Council to give away ten tonnes of compost on a first come, first served basis.
Last year, residents composted over 2300 tonnes, equivalent to 10 per cent of the total household waste or the weight of nearly 100 bin wagon loads.
Cabinet member for recycling Munsif Dad said: “Here in Hyndburn it’s vital that we compost as much as possible. Using compost made from garden waste also helps to preserve natural wetland.”
Residents should bring along their own bags, a maximum of three per household, to the council’s vehicle compound on Ranger Street opposite Willows Lane on Wednesday, August 1 between 10am and 2pm, where staff will be on hand to fill them up.
Comments are closed on this article.
Comments (10)
10:01pm Tue 24 Jul 12
psch says...
The fertiliser balance is totally wrong and can not be corrected because the potash levels are sky high. The nitrogen is locked up because it is not mature enough
10:19pm Tue 24 Jul 12
useyourhead says...
9:23am Wed 25 Jul 12
hi everyone says...
9:32am Wed 25 Jul 12
bow1974 says...
10:06am Wed 25 Jul 12
Noiticer says...
2:26pm Wed 25 Jul 12
JayEss says...
They can't win.
2:38pm Wed 25 Jul 12
M H Accrington says...
6:15pm Wed 25 Jul 12
psch says...
All it is fit for is as a potash fertiliser and to raise the organic content of the soil.
Use it neat on salt sensitive plants , seedlings cuttings etc and you'll be in trouble.
Maximum level it should be used in a Growing Media is @ 20%.
It is irresponsible for the council to give this away as a compost since it is not a compost as gardeners know it.
Potassium - very high, Chloride - high Sodium - high, Boron - potentially high
Sulphate - potentially high, Nitrogen - very low - need I say more. Skill is needed in using composted green waste which the majority of the public does not have
6:18pm Sat 28 Jul 12
maz;0) says...
12:30pm Thu 2 Aug 12
Nickmur says...
The CLUE is in the question. "who regularly compost their GARDEN waste.