Don't Forget This Critical Ingredient When Composting With Coffee Grounds

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  • Опубліковано 25 січ 2021
  • Wood Chips Are Great For The Garden, But Don't Compost THIS Kind! ► • Wood Chips Are Great F...
    Some of my favorite composting equipment featured in this video:
    Nature's Footprint Worm Factory 360 Worm Composter ► amzn.to/3cISk1B
    Get a kitchen compost bin and start saving those coffee grounds! ► amzn.to/3t9C0xp
    As an Amazon affiliate I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you when you make a purchase from Amazon using any one of the links provided. I very much appreciate you supporting the channel!
    In this video I'll tell you about the critical ingredient research shows should be added to your compost along with coffee grounds.
    gogreencompost.com
    Check out the research study "Evaluation of three composting systems for the management of spent coffee grounds" ► www.sciencedirect.com/science...
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    Thanks for watching everyone!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 592

  • @GoGreenCompost
    @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +14

    Wood Chips Are Great For The Garden, But Don't Compost THIS Kind! ► ua-cam.com/video/AhcxRB-s-Fc/v-deo.html

    • @EducatedSkeptic
      @EducatedSkeptic 7 місяців тому

      Agreed! Until our horses both died in 2020, every day got a wheelbarrow of mixed horse manure and pine shavings (including in particular those that were urine-soaked) added to the vegetable garden, first as mulch, and then the following spring, all roro-tilled into the soils. The garden produced like gangbusters, and even in dry times the soil remained moist!

    • @BaliFoodTreePlanter
      @BaliFoodTreePlanter 6 місяців тому

      I like your sincerity. There are better systems for this emergency if you want learn them.
      I consult.
      #asiflifeonEarthMatters

  • @jstndvs2007
    @jstndvs2007 3 роки тому +668

    I run a small independent coffee shop in a rural community. We have people who want coffee grounds bring in a 5 gallon bucket with their name and number on it. We keep them lined up in rotation in the back hallway and call the customer when their bucket in full and ready to go. Also I get lots of produce from happy farmers.

    • @stevoblevo
      @stevoblevo 3 роки тому +23

      great comment Justin. you made my day! I should see if my local coffee shop will do that with me.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +44

      Fantastic, if every coffee shop did this, imagine the amount of fertile soil that would be created!

    • @dakotahflannery798
      @dakotahflannery798 3 роки тому +25

      I was one of those taking coffee grounds from Justin Davis when preparing my raised keyhole garden. Imagine my surprise seeing his comment when I was on a youtube stroll!

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +9

      @@dakotahflannery798 that's awesome, small world of us composters! 😀

    • @MissZ1KCMO
      @MissZ1KCMO 2 роки тому +9

      @@stevoblevo most Starbucks stores gives the used grounds away daily

  • @ruthslone2992
    @ruthslone2992 7 місяців тому +82

    I used empty toilet paper rolls to segregate the seeds at planting, and keep track of where they’re supposed to grow. (Helps me remember where I planted them!) I didn’t realize that the cardboard decomposition was good for the soil, too. I guess that explains why I got so many cucumbers 🥒 this year.😊

    • @hezmydaddyo2722
      @hezmydaddyo2722 7 місяців тому +7

      I much with shredded paper. Not particularly attractive but not awful and when it’s turned over in the fall the earthworms eat it!

    • @boop7313
      @boop7313 7 місяців тому +5

      that's a really cool idea, thanks for sharing that!

    • @loranstaley1119
      @loranstaley1119 5 місяців тому

      Cucumbers produce ridiculous growing in anything

    • @SojournerOnSojourn
      @SojournerOnSojourn 4 місяці тому +2

      Moldy wood pulp

    • @triciac1019
      @triciac1019 Місяць тому

      ​@@hezmydaddyo2722I love that look personally.

  • @timmartin8191
    @timmartin8191 10 місяців тому +24

    Whatever you haven't figured out yet, you will figure out in short order. Videos like these really add to the knowledgw base of the gardening world.Thanks for an excellent video! Subscribed = ✓

  • @randyearles1634
    @randyearles1634 7 місяців тому +3

    thanks, I've always used coffee grounds and now I'm gonna mix it with cardboard.

  • @SN-sz7kw
    @SN-sz7kw 7 місяців тому +19

    Thank you for this. I add my coffee grounds with the unbleached filter paper to the blueberry bed to maintain soil acidity. I no longer feel lazy for not removing the grounds from the filters. 😊

    • @patpierce4854
      @patpierce4854 7 місяців тому +1

      I use the filters too, mostly because I dump them with the grounds into the kitchen container for bits when I’m only half awake!

    • @thedude4718
      @thedude4718 6 місяців тому +2

      It's been my understanding that spent coffee grounds don't add to the acidity as it all goes into the coffee. I've ground a bunch of beans and added fresh grounds to my blueberries but I've no real way, besides a pH tester, to tell if it makes a difference either way.

  • @Bogie3855
    @Bogie3855 3 роки тому +82

    When I started adding coffee grounds to my compost I found a football size clump of worms and when I separated them there was the ball of coffee grounds in the middle. Shiniest and fastest worms I have ever seen. They actually glowed.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +52

      "Mom, grandpa is telling his worm story again" 😁

    • @karenannmcmillan2206
      @karenannmcmillan2206 3 роки тому +5

      @@GoGreenCompost 😂❤️

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 2 роки тому +4

      I have red wigglers on the bottom of my pile of coffee grounds I collect over the winter before I make my piles.

    • @trishabookman4029
      @trishabookman4029 Рік тому +1

      WOW!!🐛💫🤩 I used to put in my compost and soil. I wasn't sure if I should use it with dogs and cats around. I recently read that it's great for putting in water and wiping it on your pets and leaving on for a few minutes then wash off. It works as a natural bug repellent... Thank you for your wonderful help tips! I've been missing the great results from having the worm castings in my soil☺

    • @annabackman3028
      @annabackman3028 Рік тому +3

      You turned them caffeine junkies!

  • @suburbanhomesteadsurvival7118
    @suburbanhomesteadsurvival7118 2 роки тому +18

    I have found that Costco is a great source of cardboard. They use huge sheets on their pallets...no tape and label stripping! And they shred very easy!

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  2 роки тому

      great tip, thanks!

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 2 роки тому +1

      Furniture stores have lots of it and they are getting nothing for it recycling now.

    • @PszemoI
      @PszemoI 2 роки тому +2

      Looks like we are after the same sheets of carboard from Costco! I hope to visit my local branch before you will take them all! 😀

    • @moniquevandeplas5210
      @moniquevandeplas5210 2 роки тому

      haha...funny I was just thinking of about this as I use these sheets as a tarp when laying out my compost but then after I use them and they get too wet I throw them in the city compost but if I have a lot of residue compost on them I shred and add back to my composter.

    • @triciac1019
      @triciac1019 Місяць тому

      Those big sheets would be great to lay down and then put wood chips on. It would suppress weeds nicely. I need to ask for them.

  • @maidenminnesota1
    @maidenminnesota1 2 роки тому +12

    I throw my toilet paper and paper towel tubes in with my kitchen scraps, which includes crushed eggshells and coffee grounds.

    • @triciac1019
      @triciac1019 Місяць тому +1

      Mix that with some shredded leaves or straw and you can get some good compost. Keep it moist.

  • @KoguryoKid
    @KoguryoKid 7 місяців тому +2

    Thank you (from Australia) for these tips!

  • @unlucky1353
    @unlucky1353 2 роки тому +3

    The Starbucks inside the Target my wife used to go by in Durham, NC would bag the used grounds in 5 pound bags and put them in a basket for anyone to take near their register.

  • @petermenningen338
    @petermenningen338 3 роки тому +7

    In simpler terms diversify your amendments to either type of compost system. If you look at nature what you see id diversification of materials dropped to the soil level during the year. What you are doing with any form of compost or mulch is aiding nature in the process your reward is that you speed it up.
    If the excess is green Nature lets it leach and bleach turning it brown. If the excess is brown the lichens and microbes us it as fuel and convert it to base nutrients for use. Sheet composting (organic mulches) use a combination of the two to make the nutrients available to the plants (Back to Eden method)

  • @shinigami-man5727
    @shinigami-man5727 7 місяців тому

    This video was much more enlightening than i expected. Thank you very much 😊 🙏

  • @LTeppler
    @LTeppler 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for adding the study link!

  • @jimjones8745
    @jimjones8745 8 місяців тому +1

    I add egg shells in my coffee along with a few grains of salt (via Chester on Gunsmoke) makes a great cup!

  • @nancyinoregon809
    @nancyinoregon809 6 місяців тому +12

    That study about the decrease of earthworms is pretty interesting because I've kinda found the opposite. I live in the Pacific Northwest with dry summers and very wet winters. I save my grounds into a quart yogurt container and every few days I dump them over the side of my deck onto a dedicated coffee ground pile, where they sit undisturbed. Underneath that pile is my typical PNW heavy clay loam soil, not a compost-rich garden bed. If I disturb that coffee ground pile at all during the wet season, I find it's chock full of red wrigglers that somehow found their way to that pile. When it gets dry and hot they disappear. I'm wondering what's different about my environment from a compost pile that would make such a difference.

    • @deekang6244
      @deekang6244 4 місяці тому +1

      Me too

    • @triciac1019
      @triciac1019 Місяць тому

      I think it's just the moisture level. If you can keep it moist the worms should stay. It's worth a try.

  • @craigmetcalfe1749
    @craigmetcalfe1749 3 роки тому +34

    Makes total sense. I think that sometimes we forget that coffee grounds are a green additive and the cardboard is a brown additive. I am just about to liberate my first compost where I used some of the coffee grounds I get from a coffee shop for free. You are the first person who I have seen do something similar to me. I use green plastic mesh in a cylinder in various places in the garden, so I always have compost near my three major growing zones.

    • @alliecat9607
      @alliecat9607 7 місяців тому +1

      Sure wished I lived near you -I’m tired of emptying K-pods.😅

    • @MrThatguy333
      @MrThatguy333 6 місяців тому

      @@alliecat9607 no Starbucks near by?

  • @BarbaraC02
    @BarbaraC02 7 місяців тому +1

    Great tips... thanks. I live near a Starbucks and drink coffee. Love my red wigglers and don't want to harm them.

  • @starseedenergy996
    @starseedenergy996 3 роки тому +14

    Also don’t use too much coffee grounds. It really heats up the vermicopost. . Cardboard it’s carbon rich while coffee grounds are nitrogen rich

  • @autumnmeadows4079
    @autumnmeadows4079 4 місяці тому

    Hi, I just found your channel. Thank you for the information you provided.
    Happy New Year

  • @Lucianato2
    @Lucianato2 6 місяців тому

    Great video! Will definitely be breaking down those Amazon boxes I have waiting to be put out with recycling and throw them in the backyard to be weathered, then added to compost pile and other flower beds for the winter.

  • @timmoore6055
    @timmoore6055 3 роки тому +7

    First time I have heard this. Thanks!

  • @pdloder
    @pdloder 7 місяців тому +3

    I found the coffee was upsetting my worm farm, so I created a whole new bin just for coffee grounds and then put a handful of worms in, to see how they would go, whether they would evolve to suit their environment. But I also added some cardboard and hessian bags or things like that.
    And they've been there seemingly happy for years.
    But I also tend to keep my coffee moist in plastic bags for a few weeks to months before I add into the bins, I think this tends to let mould do the first part of the breakdown - and I think it may eradicate some of the nasty chemicals.

  • @arcar66
    @arcar66 7 місяців тому

    This winter, we are using our hugelkultur garden as a compost heap....I will definitely start using coffee grounds (a trip to StarBucks might help) and shredded cardboard... should be a neat experiment.

  • @kathysimpson3249
    @kathysimpson3249 7 місяців тому +1

    I learned something new. Thanks for the video

  • @davajames5839
    @davajames5839 7 місяців тому

    Thank you for the valuable information.

  • @09echols
    @09echols 3 роки тому +43

    You can also add your coffee filter if it is unbleached natural fiber. Works when you don't have cardboard.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +6

      Oh yes definitely throw the filters in too!

    • @mrose4132
      @mrose4132 3 роки тому +1

      Good idea!!

    • @kevinisbell1867
      @kevinisbell1867 2 роки тому +1

      Mmyeah good idea good idea

    • @potelbat
      @potelbat 2 роки тому +1

      @@GoGreenCompost But also to oblige the slow-down process so it doesn't damage the worms as much? :)

    • @moniquevandeplas5210
      @moniquevandeplas5210 2 роки тому +4

      I have been throwing in my coffee filters for years and I don't think they are unbleached and my worms love them and are fine.

  • @freddieivory625
    @freddieivory625 3 роки тому +21

    Thanks for the tip! I got a little nervous because I use coffee grounds in my worm compost hotel, ground compost stop and in my garden compost tumbler. But I always use cardboard and leaves. Wiping my head from relief. 😂. My worms are happy!!

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 2 роки тому

      The coffee grounds are nearly neutral. The worms do benefit from the mixture but I haven't found them to die from too much of a good thing. They live in the bottom of my pile of coffee grounds. Too much water and heat can kill them, though.

  • @TIMTalksCooking
    @TIMTalksCooking 3 роки тому +18

    A nicely edited, totally watchable, and very useful video! I really appreciated your English, which is correct and precise throughout, as well. This is intelligent, but simple. Good luck to you!

  • @DanielLLevy
    @DanielLLevy 5 місяців тому

    Earthworm/ Lumbricid activity! What a great, easy to quantify parameter to evaluate compostation! I'm sharing this to our Community Gardens group.

  • @moniquevandeplas5210
    @moniquevandeplas5210 2 роки тому +3

    I just throw the paper filters in with the coffee grounds...worms seem to love the paper filters....also you know what I do in summer? I go to places where people are throwing out the corn husks and the strings of the husks...my worms love that. Apparently you can boil that corn silk too and use it as a blood sugar regulator and you know what's crazy. Some people must have caught on because I saw some people selling the stuff.

  • @chriswhitley3283
    @chriswhitley3283 2 роки тому +1

    One of my granddaughters works for a coffee shop. She gets me some when she can. I have gotten a couple bushels so far.

  • @bizzybee852
    @bizzybee852 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for a helpful reminder. I am pretty sure I had heard this long ago, but did not live in the country where I could garden for 5+ years and I sort of forgot. We just moved back to the country and I have been saving all my coffee grounds, and my husband and I drink a lot of coffee, like 2-3 cups a day each minimum.

  • @psdaengr911
    @psdaengr911 7 місяців тому +1

    Shredded paper works as well as cardboard does so does saw dust, grass clippings or anything with a high cellulose content and high surface areas to volume ratio. The cellulose absorbs some of the residual caffeine.

  • @vernonhenshaw3089
    @vernonhenshaw3089 6 місяців тому +1

    My mom used to coffee ground add egg shells in her worm Garden😊

  • @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920
    @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920 Рік тому +15

    Nice job Andrew, I've been Vermicomposting since 2009 in a Can-O-Worms. I started a UA-cam channel in 2020. It started out as a garden channel and has evolved into a combination garden/worm/life. I do love my worms and have 6 bins at this point.
    Thanks for the suggestion on going to Starbucks 👩‍🌾👍

    • @eulabergado6927
      @eulabergado6927 Рік тому

      Do the worms survive winter outside or do we take them indoor?

    • @drewberrynews3875
      @drewberrynews3875 Рік тому +2

      @@eulabergado6927 mine have survived the winter but I am in CA so the temp doesn't drop to freezing for long periods. I would cover my bins in clear plastic during the rain to solar heat the bins. Leave room for air by placing a couple of 5 gal buckets at the corner between bins to tent the plastic. I also did lower the soil moisture ratio making it a bit drier during higher humidity periods. They seemed happy and were thriving even in winter but again winter is not weeks of freezing where Im at.

    • @rhensontollhouse
      @rhensontollhouse 7 місяців тому +2

      There are 6 Starbucks within a ten minutes drive from my formerly low organic matter soil garden spot. Two of them put only coffee grounds in green bins. Often they will contain perhaps 1,000 pounds of old grounds each. Score! Was able to grow monster okra, squash, pepper and potato crops the second year of composting.

  • @666toysoldier
    @666toysoldier 3 роки тому +21

    I put coffee grounds and eggshells in a pan in my oven, where they get toasted when I bake something. I then process them through my old Waring blender. This makes a great addition to potting soil or garden soil.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +3

      I bet! increasing the surface area like that probably makes them break down faster

    • @desertodavid
      @desertodavid 7 місяців тому

      @666toy soldier,
      good lord how much time, energy and money did you expend putting those ingredients into your electron gobbling appliances? This is hardly the goal of composting! 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @user-el5ex9yb5r
      @user-el5ex9yb5r 7 місяців тому +3

      dried and ground banana peel is great for houseplants - especially orchids .

    • @kathyscott4671
      @kathyscott4671 7 місяців тому

      Exactly! Some of live in colder climates and dont use worm composting and need to speed up the decomposing process by baking the eggs shells, grinding things, and other ways to speed up the process.

    • @desertodavid
      @desertodavid 7 місяців тому

      @@kathyscott4671 I made a winter garden here in the high desert where it gets too cold for regular gardening. I buried my compost materials about 2 feet down in the center of my 6' x 6' covered garden. I monitored the ground temperature in the buried pile while the plants were growing. It got up to 114 degrees Fahrenheit.
      So, I still say that this can all be done naturally without unnecessary work and added CO$T of electricity.

  • @richardgordon3306
    @richardgordon3306 5 місяців тому

    I don't garden any more Land Lord won't allow, but this the best info I have seen. Thank you.

  • @BayonneHockeygirl19
    @BayonneHockeygirl19 4 місяці тому

    Thank you!!!! never heard this before..

  • @carlosmontoya2485
    @carlosmontoya2485 5 місяців тому

    That was great information, thank you.

  • @serendipitymoments4684
    @serendipitymoments4684 3 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the invaluable information...I will add cardboard to my coffee grounds compost.

  • @danno1800
    @danno1800 3 роки тому +2

    Great information! Thanks...

  • @joyannkjb4l250
    @joyannkjb4l250 11 місяців тому +1

    Just started video but wanted to say, you've got the coolest😎 compost bins I've seen yet!!👍👍🙃
    ~ok, back to vid lol

  • @tinkernaut8736
    @tinkernaut8736 3 роки тому +5

    My compost is chopped leaves and coffee grounds by way of a Su Johnson reactor. Always turns out great.

  • @TheFineLine920
    @TheFineLine920 3 роки тому +2

    Great to know! Thank you.🌹

  • @klomax7089
    @klomax7089 3 роки тому +13

    Wow great info! I’m a first time viewer and already use my coffee grounds (and sometimes Starbucks too), but I’ve been putting them directly on the soil where I have my plants (I mostly container-grow). But I’m starting a small compost area in my backyard so this video is right on time 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +3

      Glad it was helpful, thanks for watching! 😀

  • @EducatedSkeptic
    @EducatedSkeptic 7 місяців тому +10

    Will have to try adding them to the compost. I HAVE been using them as mulch in a specific garden area - but here in Maine, they have NOT molded and decomposed, but just accumulated as a kind of brown organic sand on the soil surface. We apparently don't have the right mold - at least at our farm - to get them to decompose. The only way I can get that process even started at all is to admix bread crumbs and other readily-decaying materials that will start a mold culture. We also don't have to worry that much about the earthworms here, either. None of those we have are native - not one - and in some areas, they're destroying the leaf litter layer in the forests. Took me a while to realize the mantra "earthworms are great for the garden!" isn't always true! Plus, now we have the "Chinese jumping worms," which are in some areas wreaking environmental havoc.

    • @infernaldaedra
      @infernaldaedra 5 місяців тому

      earthworms are still native to North America. In Fact maine has had native worms before the populations died out during the last interglacial. They immediately rehabitated the region and not even all worms were killes during the ice age many nemotodes can survive freeze.

    • @EducatedSkeptic
      @EducatedSkeptic 5 місяців тому

      @@infernaldaedra ... Native earthworms in North America, fine. But not in Maine. (And an Interglacial is the time period BETWEEN major glacial events.) Sorry, but when you're considering Maine, there's NO evidence for earthworms in the fossil record. North America has been glaciated some 20-25 times in the last 2.5 million years, and there is NO evidence for earthworms in that time interval - because there are virtually no known DEPOSITS in Maine from before maybe 16,000 years ago (and I've worked on two of those four known older sites). You're operating entirely from speculation. ALL earthworms now found in "the wilds" of Maine are introduced - from nursery stock, deliberate introductions, or fishing bait turned loose at the end of the day. And Nematodes are no more earthworms than snakes are.

  • @sirtrevis
    @sirtrevis Рік тому

    Good information. Thank you.

  • @patriciahall2223
    @patriciahall2223 3 роки тому +2

    I use coffee grounds all year , but needed this information ..thank you 🇨🇦

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +1

      Glad it was helpful, thanks for watching!

  • @englishcoach7772
    @englishcoach7772 3 роки тому +11

    Very sincere, thanks for the good content.

  • @UrbanHomesteadArtist
    @UrbanHomesteadArtist 7 місяців тому +3

    My worm population are going gang busters and I give them all our coffee grounds. I may not have noticed the affect because I also put into the kitchen pot toilet rolls, torn mail, tissues, paper napkins and sometimes small bits of cardboard. Kitchen scraps the chickens can’t eat too. I must have been automatically balancing it for them.

  • @adrianpabloalvarez2523
    @adrianpabloalvarez2523 3 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the info and the link for the article :)

  • @bonniehoke-scedrov4906
    @bonniehoke-scedrov4906 3 роки тому +1

    This is my first time enjoying your UA-cam channel. Great work! I’m looking forward to more great content from you. Thank you so much for this informative video! I got so much out of it.

  • @lafamillecarrington
    @lafamillecarrington 6 місяців тому

    Really useful advice. I will be increasing the amount of cardboard that I add to my compost bins.

  • @OWK000
    @OWK000 6 місяців тому +1

    I was using coffee ground to fertilize some potted plants and it would form a hard crust on the top of the soil in the pots and make it hard for water to soak in. I had a bunch of free sawdust I had obtained so I just threw some sawdust on top of the grounds and the water was able to soak in again which softened the crust, dissolving it completely and the plants thrived and were finally able to utilize the nutrients from the coffee grounds. If you are throwing out stale, un-brewed coffee grounds, or using conifer sawdust, you might want to add some kind of agricultural lime to the mix as well.

  • @annettepearce1690
    @annettepearce1690 7 місяців тому +1

    Thank you

  • @EDLaw-wo5it
    @EDLaw-wo5it Рік тому +2

    Great information. Luckily I already do that. I drink a five cup pot a day and I include not only the grounds but also the paper filter. Cardboard is so plentiful and free. We have a DOLLAR GENERAL CLOSE BY AND THEY USE TONS OF IT. Sorry for the caps. Havagudun bud and thanks.

  • @Splendid123456789
    @Splendid123456789 Рік тому +4

    Thank you for the video! How much of that huge bag of coffee grounds are you adding to each of your compost piles?

  • @charliemcgriff7643
    @charliemcgriff7643 3 роки тому +1

    Hey freind i like your setup on composting leaves

  • @MichaelJosephJr934
    @MichaelJosephJr934 3 роки тому +22

    I'm in chicago and I asked a couple coffee joints for grounds and they looked puzzled. After a couple other requests I found a dunkin that has been giving me more than I could imagine. I could barely lift the bags.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +5

      Awesome, I bet in a densely populated area like that one coffee shop probably produces a heck of a lot of grounds each day!

    • @moniquevandeplas5210
      @moniquevandeplas5210 2 роки тому

      does chicago have a big drug addict problem? I ask because I am in Vancouver, BC and I used to be part of a community garden and I used to walk over to the Starbucks and collect their bags that were their old coffee grounds that they would put in the used up bean bags and go and dump those in my garden. One day I went and they stopped handing out those bags because some junkies were taking them and selling them to people at discounted prices pretending they had bought the beans and just needed the money. So they told people to bring their own container but they had some junkies manage to get other bags and do same thing so they didn't want to do it unless they knew for sure it was for gardening so then I started walking over there with a wheelbarrow and would tell them they could come with me or come visit me. They let me take them but I am wondering if these confused places are just scared of situations like these happening. Don't get me wrong. Drug addicts I have no issue with and I worked alongside a number of addicts in the garden who gardened to keep sober but I am looking at how businesses might have reasons why they don't want to do things....and of course they just might not understand the concept that one mans garbage is anothers treasure.

    • @brianfitch5469
      @brianfitch5469 7 місяців тому

      @@moniquevandeplas5210 Every city is full of addicts large and small. Yes chicago is full of tens of thousands of addicts.

  • @papabear149
    @papabear149 3 роки тому +13

    Good information! I also get eggshells from a small breakfast restaurant nearby.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +2

      Great tip!

    • @a0flj0
      @a0flj0 3 роки тому +4

      Don't exagerate with the egg shells. They are mineral, worms can't use them in any way, they add a lot of calcium to the soil, which some plants don't tolerate well. They also influence pH - too many egg shells and your compost/soil will become alkaline.

    • @papabear149
      @papabear149 3 роки тому +2

      @@a0flj0 Thank you. I distribute them over very large area

    • @louisestaats234
      @louisestaats234 2 роки тому

      When slugs crawl over egg shells it cuts them and they die. Wondering if it does the same to worms.

    • @papabear149
      @papabear149 2 роки тому

      @@louisestaats234 I work with slugs! Can’t get them to do a damned thing!

  • @differentkim
    @differentkim 7 місяців тому

    Niiiiice. I likethose cages in the back. Will check out the channel to see if there is more info about them. I still have a huge pile of covid cardboard and, I live near a juice bar. You've given me an intriguing idea for an experiment. I love using leaves. They are the great equilizer.

  • @Pogue4
    @Pogue4 10 місяців тому

    Fantastic video Thank You

  • @lizzymoore54
    @lizzymoore54 7 місяців тому +1

    We add our coffee grounds in the brown, not the bleached white ones, coffee filter that the grounds are in. Our compost is alive with earthworms. Thanks for the info., and cardboard will be used now as well. ☺️

  • @nevyildiz1151
    @nevyildiz1151 2 роки тому +3

    I heard the best compost mix is coffee grounds, leaves and cut grass.

  • @jimjr4432
    @jimjr4432 7 місяців тому +2

    Thanks so much! Great video, so I looked up earthworms, Wikipedia says an 'terrestrial invertebrate'. For some reason I thought that maybe the die off of the worms, could be the lack of pumpkin spice latte? Thanks again, I will save my coffee grounds for sure. Will subscribe now.

  • @tonysu8860
    @tonysu8860 Рік тому +3

    The study you referenced wasn't detailed to know for sure, but I bet the probelm could also have been solved by simply feeding the worms correctly... by placing all new food in a corner which isolates the effects of food decomposition to that corner and doesn't contaminate the entire worm bed. This way, when the worms prefer a more pH neutral environment, they can retreat to their own bedding.
    In fact, I would say my recommendation is the only sure way of avoiding a worm herd killing. You can mix more carbon into the food as you recommend but it's hard to specify the exact proportions.

  • @curiousbystander9193
    @curiousbystander9193 6 місяців тому

    I love the idea of using industrial cardboard made from who knows what kind of source materials...... held together with glues and binders, probably some latex like your paper towels..... nice

  • @madewithscraps
    @madewithscraps 6 місяців тому

    Thanks for the informational video. I have and do use my coffee grounds, combined with the shredded unbleached brown paper coffee filters, spent tea and chai tea bags, and crumbled egg shells. I simply dump all in a plastic container in my garage, then add to garden raised beds when the container is full. My plots are full of happy earthworms year round. I remember when I first started to sue this compost, along with the Splendid Increase of Taste and Harvesting of my veggies, especially sweetens the tomatoes and bell peppers. Along with other home made fertilizers, made from pulled plants and liquid calcium from egg shells and water sitting; I purchase Zero Commercial Fertilizers. My pest and disease control treatments are also made with organic, around the home ingredients. Such a Noticeable, Improved Taste over store bought wanna-be veggies! This video shows how recycling of your grinds and additives are so good for your garden.

  • @hayro1088
    @hayro1088 3 роки тому +14

    I’m about to start composting for all my plants and herbs. This info was exactly what I needed to hear thank you

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +1

      Glad it was helpful, thanks for watching!

  • @danacarbone9405
    @danacarbone9405 7 місяців тому

    Thanks, great info!

  • @tohrurikku
    @tohrurikku 3 роки тому +21

    My advice as some one who worked at a coffee shop: call a day or two in advance if you want coffee grounds! Where I used to work coffee grounds would be put in the garbage with everything else. If someone wanted used coffee grounds we would have to set up an old muffin pail and collect the grounds over the day. Usually the only person who wanted the grounds was a garlic farmer. Honestly, I really want to know exactly how he used the grounds.
    I was under the impression that things like cardboard, shredded newspaper and old leaves were supposed to be added along with the kitchen scraps. There was like a ratio of two to one or something along those lines...

    • @moniquevandeplas5210
      @moniquevandeplas5210 2 роки тому +1

      I have heard of some people growing garlic straight in coffee grounds...heard it works like a charm but never tried it myself.

    • @evanstephen300
      @evanstephen300 7 місяців тому

      @@moniquevandeplas5210 Not sure how it would work, because the density of the grounds (esp after becoming wet) would not really provide adequate airflow

    • @FloridaGirl-
      @FloridaGirl- 7 місяців тому +5

      Collect leaves in fall. Mix with grass clippings. Throw in whatever you want (except meat and dairy)=BLACK GOLD

  • @goodintentions1302
    @goodintentions1302 Місяць тому

    In my area Starbucks sets out the bags of coffe grounds in a box or can so you don't even need to ask. If there's grounds, you can help yourself.

  • @Causemoi
    @Causemoi 7 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for the info! For my worms, I use coconut peat, ground egg shells and coffee grounds, and now thanks to this video, shredded cardboard. Is this OK and what else am I missing? And in what proportions should they all be?

  • @suzihomeandgardeninnewyorkcity
    @suzihomeandgardeninnewyorkcity 3 роки тому +3

    Hi 👋new to your channel ☺loved the content ! Thank you for sharing 😍

  • @newforceptyltd
    @newforceptyltd 7 місяців тому +1

    Great video with good ideas. I have found that some cardboards are treated with insecticides and/or antifungals. Just my two bobs worth.

  • @truderenken3248
    @truderenken3248 7 місяців тому

    I wish I had known this before I was shocked when my worms disappeared! Thank you!

  • @hharrison91
    @hharrison91 6 місяців тому

    Shredded tp rolls are great

  • @naturalhealthresourcecente3485

    Great tips

  • @peggybreaux8973
    @peggybreaux8973 3 роки тому +2

    Great info. thanks

  • @suewinston-elliott2674
    @suewinston-elliott2674 3 роки тому +3

    Young Aussie guys in Fremantle West Australia getting coffee grounds to grow mushrooms in ship containers. Coffee shops then buy back what they grow.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому

      awesome way to add value and utilize a waste product!

  • @philiphughes6845
    @philiphughes6845 3 роки тому +3

    I use to do this. Then I started growing mushrooms, oyster mushrooms, and use the coffee and cardboard as the growing substrate. After I get the mushrooms, I crumble what is left and add it to the garden

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому

      Tell me more! Do you use liquid culture, sawdust spawn, or what? Where do you get your cultures? Do you sterilize or pasteurize your substrate? Would love to hear your success stories with mushroom cultivation.

    • @philiphughes6845
      @philiphughes6845 3 роки тому +3

      I started about this time last year, during the lock down. I did a Google search on the easiest mushrooms to grow and they all came up with oyster mushrooms. I got an oyster mushroom growing kit from Amazon. And did another Google search on how to propagate mushrooms and went with the stem butt method. It seemed the easiest for me to start with. When I harvested the first mushrooms I loosely chopped the stems. Then boiled some cardboard (it was the box the mushrooms arrived in) taking care to remove the peaces with ink and glue. When it had cooled down I squeezed out the excess water and placed it in an airtight container, a old ice cream container, and layed the stem butts with the cardboard. I didn't expect anything to happen. Within a few days the stem butts were fuzzy, and in about 3 weeks had completely colonised the cardboard. I drink 2 or 3 French presses of coffee a day. I had saved those in the freezer, in another ice cream container. When the container was full I placed the coffee in a pan, along with chopped up cardboard, a tablespoon of sugar and some ground eggshells. Boiled it for 15 minutes or so, and when it was cool added the colonised cardboard (all in another container). And kept it moist for a few weeks, until it was like candyfloss, then took the lid off, sprayed it a few times a day and in a few days the pins started to appear

  • @noracoolen2167
    @noracoolen2167 3 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the info

  • @robertdouglas8895
    @robertdouglas8895 2 роки тому +4

    I mix rotten hay, leaves, veggie scraps from the grocery store and old manure to my compost along with coffee grounds, but I've found, at the bottom of my huge pile of coffee grounds that I collect over the winter, that my red wigglers are doing quite well if not in the numbers in my piles.
    My piles are on the ground with three layers of sheet plastic and hay in-between as well as a few feet of snow on top. When I open the oldest one up on Groundhog day to start my tomato and pepper plants. the wigglers are on the surface and very active. Before using the plastic and hay layers, the worms moved into the soil to just make it through the winter. N Idaho. -20 degrees F

    • @evelyny7037
      @evelyny7037 7 місяців тому

      So when you add the rotten hay, is this hay that you know hasn’t been sprayed with anything or GMO type etc.? The reason that I ask is because I am noticing a lot of problems with hay that has been sprayed, absolutely decimating gardens. So just made me wonder, if you are using just whatever hay you find and it’s still working just great? Thx!

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 4 місяці тому

      @@evelyny7037 I do ask if any herbicide has been used. So far, none that I've found have been sprayed. My neighbor used some that had been sprayed and it took years to come back from it.

  • @joanwharff6483
    @joanwharff6483 7 місяців тому

    I love your Stainless Steel bucket to collect your grounds in your kitchen …..
    WHERE can I get one ????? … Please ????? 💗🙃💗…. Thank You, Joanie

  • @RevealingSecretRecipes
    @RevealingSecretRecipes 3 роки тому +3

    Great tip!
    Thanks for sharing

  • @janicereadymartcher7696
    @janicereadymartcher7696 7 місяців тому +1

    Pure coffee grounds left in a plastic bag outside on the ground and weeks later it was Full of Woggims, likewise my compost bin, crammed with woggims.

  • @williamwaters4506
    @williamwaters4506 11 місяців тому +1

    The University of Arizona, Extension Service found that earth worms do not like coffee grounds, initially. The coffee grounds have to be in the soil for a number of months in which time the soil microbiome changes the chemical composition of the coffee grounds. After a few months earth works will consume the coffee grounds. Coffee grounds provide nitrogen but very little potassium and phosphate.

  • @LydellAaron
    @LydellAaron 2 роки тому

    Thank you for the cardboard advice.

  • @PinballPreparedness
    @PinballPreparedness 3 роки тому +1

    Good point because you need greens and browns.

  • @kaitsamari
    @kaitsamari Рік тому

    Shredded office paper works well also.

  • @MohsinRaza-ii6fm
    @MohsinRaza-ii6fm Рік тому +3

    Have you tried composting only coffee grounds with some 10 or 20 percent normal garden soil?
    I compost tea grounds with clay and it's ready in a month to use.

  • @queenbeekeeper
    @queenbeekeeper 3 роки тому +5

    Good timing! I actually had planned to add a bag of coffee grounds to my 'tumbler' compost bin tomorrow so I will be sure to add plenty of cardboard with it. I would have been upset if I had accidently killed all my worms if I had added only the grounds.

    • @maryannbritz1061
      @maryannbritz1061 3 роки тому +1

      Just add the filter paper with the grounds. Works the same as cardboard.

  • @davidbowman271
    @davidbowman271 3 роки тому +19

    Compost attracts Black Soldier Fly larvae (Hermetia Illucens) which quickly devour the coffee grounds in your compost. Don't be alarmed! They mutate into Black Soldier Flies which do not have any moving mouth parts. The Black Soldier Fly larvae are also very nutritious and can be feed to you chickens if you have them or to the fish in your pond.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +2

      I wish I had some chickens, I get a lot of black soldier fly larvae at certain times during the year

    • @stevoblevo
      @stevoblevo 3 роки тому +1

      hard not to be alarmed seeing those guys eh? just as challenging as in Luke 2:10 I'd bet. lol

    • @billclinton6040
      @billclinton6040 3 роки тому +2

      I have loads of BSF larvae in my compost bin and they avoid the grounds along with the citrus. I suppose if there was nothing else in the bin they might eat the grounds, but I haven't seen that yet. Plus, I have a pile of grounds composting separately from the bin and no BSF larvae have ever appeared in it. In fact, grounds seem to deter all sorts of insects including vermin. I think the smell must repel them. There is probably still a small amount of caffeine left in them which is a natural insect repellent. Even though they are considered a green, they are not nearly as high in N as grass clippings or kitchen scraps because the compost piles using just grounds as the green source don't heat up nearly as much. None of this stops me from collecting grounds though from my local SB's. Grounds are a year round source of greens unlike other sources which is crucial because I always have an overabundance of browns and I appreciate their repellent properties not just in the compost but the garden as well.

    • @moniquevandeplas5210
      @moniquevandeplas5210 2 роки тому

      @@GoGreenCompost you can sell them

    • @MrBig8Little
      @MrBig8Little 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@stevoblevoor Exodus 8:24

  • @little_dandelion
    @little_dandelion Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the video. I'm getting excited by the prospect of a more convenient way to make compost.
    I'm searching the info for an hour now but can't find it. Do you know how much compost 1 kg of spent coffee ground gives you?
    I've seen that the usual food waste output is 15-25%. Looking at coffee grounds, there's not much water or soft matter that'll be lost in comparison to other greens during the composting process. Am I wrong? So to be optimistic, can I hope to get more than 250g compost from 1 kg coffee grounds?

  • @guyh.4553
    @guyh.4553 6 місяців тому

    Very interesting. Theres been comments on soil types being acidic, neutral, or basic. That doesn’t apply here until you go to apply it. Just an FYI.
    My question to you is are you layering the coffee grounds to your bins or what? Another question is did that study look into tunnel composting? I'd be interested. Good information, thanks!

  • @yourportlandlifestyle2907
    @yourportlandlifestyle2907 11 місяців тому

    there are places to get free sawdust too. I bet that would work as well. I have really dense dirt in my front strip by the street. I am trying an experiment. I am adding coffee, leaves, sawdust and my camilia flowers that dropped. I read that worms do well if they have a good mix of stuff above ground... so I'll see

  • @pcatful
    @pcatful 7 місяців тому

    We've been feeding our worm coffee for a long time. They seem to be fine. Thanks for the information. Maybe they could be better. I want to know where you got that bin material behind you.

  • @hezmydaddyo2722
    @hezmydaddyo2722 7 місяців тому

    Where did you find those nice black plastic compost wrap-around? Thank you

  • @geraldnemanishen5079
    @geraldnemanishen5079 3 роки тому +7

    I have never had problems with my vermicomposter - nice healthy worm population. I think the reason is that I just add my paper coffee filters with residual grounds after I shake out the excess grounds into another pail. This I empty into my other aerated compost binds with the kitchen and garden waste. Sometimes I do add carbon when I think I am low on carbon in the mix.

    • @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920
      @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920 3 роки тому +1

      I agree with you. I've kept a 3 tier worm bin since 2008. We drink 16 cups/daily. I put in the grounds, filter, banana peel and strawberry tops 7 days/week. I can't tell if it is slowing them down, but I have to clean them out once a month. I also had ground Eggshells for grit and toilet paper and paper towel roll. I think the combination works for me.

    • @GoGreenCompost
      @GoGreenCompost  3 роки тому +1

      @@peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920 Sounds like a pretty good worm diet!

    • @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920
      @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920 3 роки тому

      @@GoGreenCompost they are happy little creatures 🐛

    • @moniquevandeplas5210
      @moniquevandeplas5210 2 роки тому +1

      @@peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920 you drink 16 cups of coffee a day?

    • @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920
      @peggyhelblingsgardenwhatyo7920 2 роки тому +1

      @@moniquevandeplas5210 my husband drinks most of it. 6oz. cups