Repurposing!

As a form of repurposing, I suppose, my compost pile last year was the most successful I've ever had, staying continuously hot and processing pretty much anything I could put into it in a short time. Wanting to see if I could keep it hot all winter, I needed some ingredients I could add to my regular kitchen stuff to keep the hot composting going, given that there's not a lot of green stuff available during the winter, other than coffee grounds and vegetable scraps. For those who don't compost, hot composting requires a mix of what are called greens and browns, which are not necessarily those colors.

Greens include grass clippings, weeds, vegetable scraps, coffee grounds, meat, and manure, while browns include dead leaves, wood chips, shredded paper or cardboard, paper towels, straw, hay, and so on. Ideally, the mix should be 2-4 parts browns to 1 part greens. Both browns and greens are easy to come by from late spring to fall, but greens are harder to come by in the winter. When temperatures are too low, some browns (paper towels, egg cartons) and some greens (meat, cat litter) compost slowly. Additionally, since my compost pile is too large to turn over, which wouldn't be a good idea in cold winter temperatures anyhow, I use an auger to punch holes in the pile during the winter that I fill with compost materials, capping them with shredded cardboard and wood chips. When the balance isn't right, or there is too much water, that part of the pile might go anaerobic and turn smelly or slimy.

Greens are nitrogen-rich, while browns are carbon-rich.

Okay, now on to the topic. I needed something that would serve as a green, yet not compost too quickly. Since vegetable scraps tend to break down quickly, while meat scraps and cat litter are slow, there is a risk that the fast-working greens will run out before the meat or manure is composted, and the pile would go anaerobic, cool, and then freeze. In past piles, the center of the pile didn't freeze, but it also didn't stay hot enough to process some of this stuff.

So, I chose something in between - split peas. I was looking for something intended as animal feed, and found some, but it was more expensive than the human-grade stuff. I bought 20 pounds of split peas and 20 pounds of cracked corn, the latter intended as animal feed. Cracked corn is classified as a brown, but it has more nitrogen than other browns, like cardboard, which I have a lot of year-round. Things like melon rinds and banana peels are greens, but they are susceptible to turning into smelly slime if the balance isn't right.

Rather than eating it or feeding it to the squirrels, I repurposed it by adding some split peas and cracked corn to each auger hole I drilled in various parts of the compost pile throughout the winter. It worked great. Even at below-zero temperatures, any auger hole I made near the center of the pile was steaming hot, and it lasted through our long winter. The center was steaming hot, and the periphery (except for the outer couple of inches) was warm enough to keep the composting worms alive.
 
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We will have to discuss our macrame' projects. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:

I have taken old hay twine and made spare reins to carry on trail rides. Especially big rides with inexperienced folks who might break one of their reins and didn’t think to carry a spare set.

I braided three hay twines, put swivel snaps on the ends, rolled them up and put them in my saddlebag for emergencies. If someone else broke a rein, they had something safe to use and I wasn’t out anything except a dollar or two for the snaps.

In a real pinch, I have also strung hay twine where the fence was down until I could get to it with wire. I once read a single piece of twine has a 300# test pull — if that’s true, for sure it would hold the fence together until I had time to get back to it…..
Already then! I used to use baling twine to macrame plant holders. I also used it for making halters and ropes. Years ago, I was invited to be the livestock judge instructor for a 4 H jamboree. I took one of my twine made halters with lead rope, using 3 colors of discarded baling twine, to show the kids, and ended up giving a class on how to braid the twine halter and make a long rope from it.
 
OK, I stand corrected!! :D
Damn tootin chickadee! My USA made bras, even fake leather, are not to be mocked. No commie made junk supporting my girls. I wish I had a great soft lambskin one like the old days, but not in my budget these days. A small custom biker outfit over on the coast makes them, but $1500 and a 15 month wait is too much and too long.
 
Damn tootin chickadee! My USA made bras, even fake leather, are not to be mocked. No commie made junk supporting my girls. I wish I had a great soft lambskin one like the old days, but not in my budget these days. A small custom biker outfit over on the coast makes them, but $1500 and a 15 month wait is too much and too long.
They are out there. Try goth shops.
 
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