Greenhouse Compost heap!

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Posted by Derek on November 8, 2010, 10:47 am
 
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this thread
From today's Daily Telegraph

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/gardeningadvice/8102532/How-to-make-the-most-of-your-time-and-garden-in-the-colder-months.html


greenhouse.

partially decomposed material.

the base.

spring veg.

from the

I have heard of using a 'hotbed' to grow melons under glass, but a new
compost heap  during the winter months?

www.lincolnfuchsiasociety.info


Posted by Bob Hobden on November 8, 2010, 11:07 am
 

"Derek"  wrote ...

From today's Daily Telegraph

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/gardeningadvice/8102532/How-to-make-the-most-of-your-time-and-garden-in-the-colder-months.html


I have heard of using a 'hotbed' to grow melons under glass, but a new
compost heap  during the winter months?

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Is that a good idea? It's not long since I cleaned out and used Jeyes to
disinfect our little greenhouse ready for the winter, rotting plant material
is just going to encourage moulds etc, or am I wrong?
The Victorians used manure outside the greenhouse in a separate pit to
provide heat for growing pineapples etc.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
W.of London. UK


Posted by <vicky on November 8, 2010, 1:57 pm
 
We put compost under grow bags in the cold frame in late winter to ready
them for growing, but mostly all we got was HUGE potato plants growing up
and over the grow bags and smothering everything in them!


Posted by Jake on November 8, 2010, 2:54 pm
 wrote:


Nah. I'll stick to my couple of layers of bubble-wrap. Bought some
industrial sized rolls a few years ago. Just finished attaching them
after the annual disinfectation. Works fine for me and it's easy, in
the spring, to dunk the wrap in a weak solution of Jeyes and hang it
on the line to dry before being packed away again.

And I think I can stay fit enough without spending an hour chopping
trees down and then another hour planting new ones in their place. But
I'm now worried about what I might be breathing in when I'm gardening!
Better buy a mask for next year!