Quizzes & Puzzles11 mins ago
Leaf Mould Or Compost ?
6 Answers
All my leaves have gone into my compost bins, with the excess going into the council's wheelie bin. Should I have tried to make leafmould instead ? If so, how, and what would I do with it when it was ready for use ? Would it be more useful than compost ? Would it create less methane whilst rotting down ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I gather up leaves from my garden and from the street trees every autumn/winter, pack them into plastic bin bags, throw in a jug of water just to keep them a bit damp, and finally punch the bags with a rake or garden fork to make a few holes. Tie the bags up and stick them in a corner of the garden out of the way.
Come spring you will have the best mulch you can imagine, and it's all free.
Come spring you will have the best mulch you can imagine, and it's all free.
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I've found that some leaves will rot down much faster than others, ash and lime leaves are about the best.
some other leaves, such as London plane can be thick and leathery and decompose very slowly. If the latter is the case, you can speed things up by shredding the leaves or as I do run the mower over them, before raking up, bits of grass and worm casts will only help!.
Otherwise Jenny Kenny's advice is sound!
some other leaves, such as London plane can be thick and leathery and decompose very slowly. If the latter is the case, you can speed things up by shredding the leaves or as I do run the mower over them, before raking up, bits of grass and worm casts will only help!.
Otherwise Jenny Kenny's advice is sound!
Leafmould is good for topdressing beds and mulching trees and shrubs. It tends to slow compost down so separate bin or bins is good or put leaves in perforated plastic bags. After a year or two...leafmould. Any organic matter is useful in a garden. Don't know about the methane, leafmould unlikely to be worse, surely? Much information at
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