I am the last person to be able to boast re: my ‘balanced’ perfect compost, layered like zee perfect lasagna. After all, here I sit, writing in my pajamas, in the middle of the afternoon! (Hibernation is natural in winter!)
Like most mortals, I easily keep on dumping green kitchen waste into my compost pile…..no matter how many articles I write about balanced compost and how your compost must be like a perfect lasagna. In all honesty, I regularly forget, even consciously neglect (like most gardeners) to alternate nitrogen (wet green kitchen waste) with the carbon layer – leaves, shredded paper, etc. I just keep throwing it on – dumping my stainless steel Lee Valley bucket right in to the pile.
Then one day, as I walk the crooked path to the heap, I see (and smell) the terrible consequence of my arrogant foolishness - my compost has become…..the creature from the lagoon.

Some time ago, an idea came to me while I was peeling veggies and making a mess, peelings going into the sink…..also inconvenient and impractical because of possible clogs, how much plumbers cost, not to mention dirtying cutting boards, and having to use precious water to wash the cutting boards! I was really only thinking of tidiness and avoiding overuse of water….when the light bulb went on. This is also a great way to achieve carbon/nitrogen balance in your compost.

Here’s how: whenever you are cooking – making soup, trimming veggies, peeling, place one doubled sheet of newspaper on your kitchen counter. Peel, trim and cut directly onto the newspaper, as illustrated. The newspaper can remain there for the duration of evening meal prep, or soup-making. By the way, newspaper is safe now, according to my sources, as the ink is vegetable-based.

When you’re done, fold up the newspaper package - edges in. Then roll, like you were making a cabbage roll, and put it in your compost bucket or outdoors. Presto! Your ‘wrap’ reaches it’s final resting place in the form of a balanced little package of carbon and nitrogen. The worms also appreciate the reading material ☺.
Freelance writer Sharon Hanna runs the gardening program at Queen Alexandra school. her newest venture is "HotBeds" - food garden installations, gardening lessons - helping folks get growing
Comments
I agree with Cheryl, these are some good tips for keeping your compost from turning into "soup". Here is an article that we posted recently outlining the A-Z of composting. If your interested, take a peak.
http://homebasics.ca/viewarticle.asp?articleid=4584
August 5, 2008 at 12:12Thanks for all the good information about Rhubarb.
February 29, 2008 at 08:54In your research did you run into the "myth" that after the flowers appear, the rhubarb has too much oxalic acid in the stems and you shouldn't eat it into the summer? Apparently oxalic acid inhibits the absorbtion of calcium. I have heard this more than once. I do not know what other damage it does.
I have huge healthy rhubarb plants in the Cariboo and I always feel slightly uneasy as we can not stop eating and freezing it well into July and sometimes August every year. I do cut the blossoms as soon as I see them.
By the way, my rhubarb does not seem to get woody (except in late August regularly) even tho I don't separate it as often as every five or six years. I separate it when the stems become thin and weak- maybe every ten years.
Sharon Hanna
Thanks for letting me know about your rhubarb! I wish I could email you directly as I'm sure you won't be checking this blog frequently :-) You are likely right about the rhubarb not being divided every five or six years. I guess it depends on how fast it grows and, as you mention, how thin or weak the stalks get....
thanks again for commenting....
April 26, 2008 at 12:58Sharon
Interesting that this newspaper-on-the-counter trick has come up again. It was a common thing to do all during the last century in the kitchens I knew. Of course-who knows what the dangerous ink did. . . It is a habit that I got OUT of because of worries about the ink and now thanks to current research and changes we cans start doing it again.
February 29, 2008 at 08:39Hi Sharon: I just read your information on the compost hint and think it's a perfect idea for keeping away from compost soup! I just have to make sure our small island paper is using the non-toxic print as that is the limit of our paper reading. I'm inspired and will begin this method immediately. Thanks, Cherryl
January 14, 2008 at 15:38'soy-based inks' are used by the Georgia Straight for both colour and black and white print. There is some concern re: inserts (shiny ad-type ones)....so I would not use those. I have an email into the production editor of The Sun. I asked for specific information regarding inks - "soy based" seems so easy to say but....I want to know more. Thanks for raising this issue, Diana!
S
January 10, 2008 at 11:08Diana - I don't know about the coloured inks. I will check that out. Thanks for the question.
January 10, 2008 at 10:01S
Good idea Sharon. I also line my stainless steel pail with any small brown paper bags that come my way, like the bags for mushrooms, so that they also make their way into my worm compost already nicely damp and it's easier to clean the pail.
Have you heard that the colour inks are veggie-based and worm-friendly or just the black inks?
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