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The Garden Organic Guide to Making Compost
Garden Organic Guide Series

by Pauline Pears

     

Every household generates a lot of waste products, but after separating them for collection there is still a lot left.  Why not benefit your garden by putting in a compost heap or bin?   For beginners there seem to be a lot of do’s and don’ts to take into consideration so it can seem daunting; here is a book which lifts the lid on how to do it properly.

This truly is a really good book.  I’m no gardener but I am very into green issues and have a garden, so was keen to learn.  As gardening does not interest me especially I didn’t want to plough through lengthy treatises on the subject, I just wanted what a lot of people want—a greener way of disposing of my waste.  To make this book extra user friendly, every page has lots of photographs with captions telling you how, why and what.  For example, there are pictures of what to compost, what not to compost, different options on heaps and bins available, how products compost etc.  I found I was learning all the basics I needed to know very easily.

There is advice on how to use your compost, making a worm bin (at last I know why mine failed!) and "green compost" plants like winter tares to plant for soil benefit. I particularly liked the last section showing alternative ways of using some waste products normally thrown away. such as yoghourt pots, polystyrene packaging, car tires, plastic bottles and lolly sticks. One for my keeper shelf, and one that also got me thinking about why the way the book is written and presented makes it so readable and useful.  Maybe now my worm bin might work...

The publisher, Search Press, also offers other books on green issues.

The Book

Search Press
June 2009
Paperback
1844484653 / 9781844484652
How-To Books / Green Issues
More at Amazon.com US || UK
Excerpt
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The Reviewer

Rachel A Hyde
Reviewed 2009
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© 2009 MyShelf.com