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Waste Management

Allamakee County

Recycling/Trash Disposal/Household Hazardous Waste Information

For more information on this and other topics, please call

Allamakee County Waste and Recycling

563-568-4806

Home Composting: Reap a Heap of Benefits

Why compost?

The best method for getting rid of yard waste is also the easiest.

Composting is nature’s way of turning your yard waste into a valuable

soil conditioner. Composting helps your garden and lawn, saves

water, benefits the environment, and saves you money on bags and

commercial soil additives.

What to compost

DO Compost: grass clippings, leaves, weeds & garden debris, small

brush, twigs, wood ash, sawdust & wood chips, egg shells, and coffee

grounds

DON’T Compost: meat, bones, fat, dairy products, oils, whole branches, logs, pet or human waste,

charcoal briquette ash, sawdust, or ash from treated wood

How to compost

All you need to compost are some basic gardening tools, materials for a bin, and a bit of soil to start

the process. Bins should be square in shape, usually measuring 2’ x 2’ x 2’ or 4’ x 4’ x 4’. The bin needs to

have air running through

it, so snow fencing,

bricks, and woven wire

are excellent bin walls.

Recipe: Mix one

part green yard waste

with two parts brown

yard waste in a pile.

Mix in one inch of soil.

Keep pile as moist as a

wrung-out sponge. Turn pile every week to let air in. In between four weeks and a year, depending on

how often you turn it and how moist the pile is kept, you will have a batch of compost.

Uses for compost

Finished compost is a crumbly, sweet smelling dirt-like substance. It can be mixed into the soil to help

the seeding process and to help fight erosion. It can also be used as mulch instead of commercial soil

additives.

 

Yard Care: Do Your Share

Growing a healthy lawn

• Rake up dead thatch before the grass grows in the spring.

• Let the grass grow out to 3 to 5 inches.

• Cut only the top third of the grass off at a time (about 1 inch)

• Leave clippings on your lawn.

• Water only every 1 or 2 weeks depending on your soil.

• Avoid over-fertilizing and have your soil tested every 3 to 4 years.

What to do with grass clippings

If you use a mulching mower you can leave the clippings right on your lawn as a natural fertilizer.

Otherwise, you can put your clippings, leaves, and brush in a compost pile for use as mulch later. If you

live in a city, contact your city for the location of the yard waste collection site nearest you.

 

 

House Hold Hazardous Materials

What can be Recycled?

Rural Drop off

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