Did anyone see an article in Grit magazine some months ago...heck, maybe it was a year ago. It had a comprehensive list of things you could compost. I looked for it online, but didn't find it. A real compost addict will compost any of the following (as best from my memory), in addition to the usual kitchen waste, yard trimmings, and so on:
coffee filters and tea bags
paper plates (not wax coated)
Q-tips and cotton balls
100% cotton clothing, etc.
cooked bones
dryer lint
shredded newspaper, junk mail, scrap paper, etc.
wood ashes (as Marshall mentioned)
contents of vacuum
human and pet hair
Good grief, it was a very long list and I can't remember a fraction of it. Anybody got anything they can add to that?
You are not supposed to compost meat, but I do. Sometimes I bury whole dead chickens. You can compost anything if you can bury it deep enough and are willing to wait on it to naturally decompose. If my pile is already nice and hot, you can come back about 2 months later and find nothing but a layer of melted fat and a few bones. Problem usually is if it isn't buried deep enough, something will come dig it up. I compost the feathers, blood and other leftovers from processing day the same way...bury it deep. Bones are super valuable for calcium and other minerals and plants love them...their roots will go after them. I refuse to throw them in the garbage, but that's just me.
When I die, I want to be buried in my compost pile. Seriously!
