NON SMELLY WAY TO MAKE COMFREY OR NETTLE FERTILISER?

Started by Duke Ellington, March 21, 2012, 23:09:10

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Duke Ellington

Does anyone have a way to keep the smell contained while it is stewing?
How long does it need to stew?
Duke


dont be fooled by the name I am a Lady!! :-*

Duke Ellington

dont be fooled by the name I am a Lady!! :-*

lottie lou

I use a bucket with holes in the bottom on top of another bucket.  Put the comfrey leaves in the top one, weight down with a brick and cover.  The juce drops though into the bottom bucket.  It only niffs a bit whilst you are transferring the juice into other containers.  Haven't tried it with nettles but may do so this year.

Digeroo

Does it work properly if it does not stink ;D ;D 

louise stella

I just stick it in an old water butt, not conected to a downpipe!
Drain some off into a can and dilute and use!
Grow yer bugger grow!

raisedbedted

Stewing it in water always stinks, so I just fill an old barrel with comfrey leaves, dont add water or even weight it, after a month the black syrup oozes out and I pour it out, it doesnt smell that strong but needs diluting much more than if you'd steeped the leaves in water.

And stewed nettles are even worse!
Best laid plans and all that

lottie lou

Would nettles work the same without stewing.  If so I've got I've got loooads of nettles

macmac

Quote from: lottie lou on March 22, 2012, 00:03:22
I use a bucket with holes in the bottom on top of another bucket.  Put the comfrey leaves in the top one, weight down with a brick and cover.  The juice drops though into the bottom bucket.  It only niffs a bit whilst you are transferring the juice into other containers.  Haven't tried it with nettles but may do so this year.
After years of smelly "soup" in a water butt I adopted the bucket method ,and then someone donated I think they're called Bokashi bins,It's the same thing ('tho I believe is properly used a bit like a wormery) It has a tap on it so I just feed comfrey leaves in the top and drain comfrey liquor via the tap. :)
sanity is overated

Duke Ellington

I was flicking through the latest Lakeland catalogue and found this.

http://www.lakeland.co.uk/51997/Plant-Food-Maker;jsessionid=8F2E15FCAF606E7CCD0FB4C511679DD0.app1

At £20 it's a bit pricey but it looks neat.

Duke
dont be fooled by the name I am a Lady!! :-*

grannyjanny

Duke that looks very like the bokashi composting bin but without the bran added. I have one & was thinking about using it to make comfrey fertilizer in. You might find something similar on ebay or even the bokashi one. The bokashi I have doesn't let any aromas out ;D. Big bonus as when you use it as directed the stuff honks when it's rotted down.

lillian

Quote from: Duke Ellington on March 21, 2012, 23:09:10
Does anyone have a way to keep the smell contained while it is stewing?
How long does it need to stew?
Duke




Brewed mine up in a 3 litre squash bottle with the lid lightly screwed on which seems to stop the whiffs.

Digeroo

QuoteBrewed mine up in a 3 litre squash bottle

Sounds good but how did you get the comfrey in?  Perhaps a 5 litre one would be better they have a larger top.

lillian

#11
The 3 litre squash bottles have a slightly wider lid. I just chop the compfrey up and shuv it in :)
Or you could dry the leaves in the sun, scrunch them up and store it  for later use.

Tulipa

I'm glad my allotment is upwind of yours  ;) ;)

Duke Ellington

dont be fooled by the name I am a Lady!! :-*

Ninnyscrops.



If you have wheelie bins Duchess, go to the local council and find out where the damaged ones are. They will usually give them to you for free, put a tap in at the base and raise so you can fill old plastic bottles with the smelly stuff.  ;)

Ninnyssssssssssssssss
(Proud owner of two  ;D)

pumkinlover

That looks great! When you say damaged  how bad is it? The bin looks fine, what I mean is what type of damage makes them taken out of service, but are still usable for allotments? I will be on to our council to get some!

Ninnyscrops.

These two have damaged "lips", where the lifting gear would normally fit, Pumpkinlover. Others may have similar minor damage such as the hole where the lid handle is, and as you say, perfectly usable for the allotment. Have a word as they are quite happy to get rid of them.

Ninnys

pumkinlover


Borlotti

There are a lot worse smells, won't go into the details.  I don't mind the smell of my rotting nettle leaves, and my peas were brilliant last year, the envy of everyone on the allotment, so there.  ;D ;D  Maybe luck, or the nettle feed I gave them.

lottie lou

Do you soak the nettle leave sin water and do you put the stalks in as well?

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