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75 Things You Can Compost: Who Knew?

compost-bucket.jpgWe have been composting kitchen scraps and garden clippings for awhile now, but Planet Green's recent list of "75 Things You Can Compost, But Thought You Couldn't," opened our eyes to a whole new world of compost possibilities ...

 
 

Among the compostable items that surprised us, or that we'd never considered before:

• Wine corks
• Pizza crusts and pizza boxes
• Moldy cheese

Here's the full list:
75 Things You Can Compost, But Thought You Couldn't, from Planet Green

What kinds of things do you put in your compost bin or heap?

Related:

How To: Make Your Own Worm Bin
How To: Make a Shipping Pallet Compost Bin
Best Kitchen Composters

(Image: Christopher Onstott)

posted originally from: TheKitchn

Tags

food and cooking, gardening, composting, compost

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Comments (6)

Latex condoms? That surprised me more than moldy cheese.

posted by graciela on September 4th 2009 at 11:32am
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some of that was kind of a no brainer and just a repeat

like no sh** you can compost tea bags, coffee grounds, and liquids like really?


i'm suprised by a couple like loofahs and condoms but those would take forever to deteriorate and i don't think your worms would be to happy to munch on those :/

posted by simply_hibiscus on September 4th 2009 at 12:58pm
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iI just bought a NatureMills composter, and in the instructions, it explicitly says not to put newspapers in it. But newspapers on on the list of 75 things. Anyone know why?

posted by KimberlyM on September 4th 2009 at 1:06pm
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loofahs - yes
latex - no

posted by fjorlief on September 4th 2009 at 1:17pm
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I would imagine that the newspaper is omitted based on the fact that the ink varies from newspaper to newspaper. If the newspaper that you read is printed with vegtable based inks Im sure it would be fine. On the other hand that might also refer to the composting method perhaps the system that you're using can't break down the newspaper effectively

posted by Pennyk on September 4th 2009 at 3:14pm
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I think this list is helpful, I don't know why but I haven't been composting expired bread, cereal, grains, etc. Duh.

Tere are some things on this list I'm not too sure of, like pet food. My cats eat canned food, which is mostly meat, won't that attract rodents to my urban compost pile? Don't think my neighbors would like that one. Also, paper towels and tissues, what about the bleach and other chemicals they're made with? Isn't that bad for the compost and my garden later?

posted by Candice on September 5th 2009 at 8:14am
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