Posted by Gopher on April 10, 2011, 8:16 am
I've had a go at clearing (just a bit) of the thistles, docks and
nettles) in my wildlife patch at the end of the garden. The native
wildflowers were becoming choked as originally the land was farmland and
is, sadly, rather rich for most wildflowers which get smothered by the
more aggressive weeds. However nettles etc. are preferred food plants
for butterflies so it's been more of a culling rather than an
eradication exercise.
My question is it reasonable to compost the nettles, thistles, docks
etc. which I have dug up (ensuring roots left in the soil)? The foliage
has been separated from any roots and is waiting its fate. To compost
with the aid of the normal compost heap or should it be taken to the
tip? I know that nettles are supposed to be helpful when composted but
am not so sure about the others.
Any advice very welcome. TIA.
--
Gopher .... I know my place!
Posted by nmm1 on April 10, 2011, 7:43 am
>My question is it reasonable to compost the nettles, thistles, docks
>etc. which I have dug up (ensuring roots left in the soil)? The foliage
>has been separated from any roots and is waiting its fate. To compost
>with the aid of the normal compost heap or should it be taken to the
>tip? I know that nettles are supposed to be helpful when composted but
>am not so sure about the others.
I compost the lot, roots and all, and have no trouble.
Regards,
Nick Maclaren.
Posted by Gopher on April 10, 2011, 8:50 am
>>
>>My question is it reasonable to compost the nettles, thistles, docks
>>etc. which I have dug up (ensuring roots left in the soil)? The foliage
>>has been separated from any roots and is waiting its fate. To compost
>>with the aid of the normal compost heap or should it be taken to the
>>tip? I know that nettles are supposed to be helpful when composted but
>>am not so sure about the others.
>I compost the lot, roots and all, and have no trouble.
>Regards,
>Nick Maclaren.
I just noticed an error in my original post. I have ensured the roots
are _not_ left in the soil.
Since posting, my wife has told me that she has been told that dock
leaves should not be composted. This from a local farmer's wife. Dare I
disagree?... :-))
--
Gopher .... I know my place!
Posted by Stephen Wolstenholme on April 10, 2011, 9:35 am
>Since posting, my wife has told me that she has been told that dock
>leaves should not be composted. This from a local farmer's wife. Dare I
>disagree?... :-))
Dock roots will survive most composting and rapidly regrow from
fragments.
Steve
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Posted by Janet on April 10, 2011, 10:41 am
>
> I've had a go at clearing (just a bit) of the thistles, docks and
> nettles) in my wildlife patch at the end of the garden. The native
> wildflowers were becoming choked as originally the land was farmland and
> is, sadly, rather rich for most wildflowers which get smothered by the
> more aggressive weeds. However nettles etc. are preferred food plants
> for butterflies so it's been more of a culling rather than an
> eradication exercise.
>
> My question is it reasonable to compost the nettles, thistles, docks
> etc. which I have dug up (ensuring roots left in the soil)? The foliage
> has been separated from any roots and is waiting its fate.
In summer I go out in the field to harvest large quantities of growing
thistles and nettles (green, before seeding, roots included) for the
compost heap. My heaps get very hot (nettles are a good compost activator)
and I've never had a problem with either plant returning from the dead to
haunt me. They make great compost.
Docks are a different matter, spawn of the devil. I reckon their roots
would survive a nuclear attack and spring back to life a week later, so I
never put those in the compost.
Janet
>etc. which I have dug up (ensuring roots left in the soil)? The foliage
>has been separated from any roots and is waiting its fate. To compost
>with the aid of the normal compost heap or should it be taken to the
>tip? I know that nettles are supposed to be helpful when composted but
>am not so sure about the others.