{"title":"How to Compost at Home for Beginners","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/gardening/how-to-compost-at-home-for-beginners","category":{"slug":"gardening","name":"Gardening"},"creator":{"name":"Huw Richards","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeaKRrrpWiQFJJmiuon2WoQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swLkA1cHJ4Y"},"tldr":"Learn how to compost at home the lazy way. Turn kitchen scraps and garden waste into rich homemade compost with one simple greens-and-browns rule.","totalDurationSeconds":561,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["garden fork","pitchfork","wheelbarrow"],"materials":["browns (dead leaves, cardboard)","greens (kitchen scraps, grass clippings)","compost starter"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Set Up Your Compost Bin","text":"Start with a spot in the corner of your garden or allotment and a bin that holds a decent amount of material. Huw uses simple pallet bays, but any open compost bin works. The bigger the bin, the more heat and volume you build, which speeds up the whole process. Site it somewhere easy to reach with a wheelbarrow so adding scraps never feels like a trek."},{"number":2,"title":"Learn Greens and Browns","text":"Everything you add falls into one of two camps. Greens are the wet, fresh stuff: grass clippings, vegetable peelings, coffee grounds, and spent plants. Browns are the dry, woody stuff: cardboard, autumn leaves, and prunings. Greens bring nitrogen, browns bring carbon. Get both into the pile and the microbes that do the rotting have everything they need."},{"number":3,"title":"Add Your Greens","text":"Tip your greens straight into the bin. Kitchen scraps, lawn clippings, coffee grounds, and the tops of finished plants all go in. This is the fuel that gets your heap warm and active. Keep a small caddy on the kitchen counter so peelings and scraps have somewhere to land, then empty it into the bin every few days."},{"number":4,"title":"Add Your Browns","text":"Match those greens with a good helping of browns. Break up woody winter prunings, tear cardboard into pieces, and tip in dry autumn leaves. Browns soak up excess moisture and stop the pile turning into a wet, smelly mush. Keeping a stash of leaves or shredded cardboard nearby means you always have browns on hand when a big load of greens shows up."},{"number":5,"title":"Follow the One Rule","text":"Here is the whole method in a sentence: roughly balance greens and browns as you go. A big load of grass gets a big load of browns piled on top. You do not need to weigh anything or be precise. Just even it out over time and the pile stays sweet-smelling and keeps breaking down. If it ever smells sour, you have too many greens, so add more browns."},{"number":6,"title":"Keep Filling the Bin","text":"Add material load by load, whenever you have it. That is the lazy part. There is no turning schedule to keep and no fussing required. Just keep the greens and browns balanced as the bin fills. When it is full, start a second bin and let the first one sit and rot down on its own while you carry on filling the new one."},{"number":7,"title":"Harvest the Finished Compost","text":"Give the full bin several months to a year, then dig the finished compost out from the bottom with a garden fork. You are looking for dark, crumbly material that smells earthy, with the woody bits mostly broken down. Any lumps or large pieces that have not finished can go straight back into your active bin for another round."},{"number":8,"title":"Spread It on Your Beds","text":"Now put it to work. Spread a layer of your homemade compost over the beds to feed the soil, hold moisture, and grow healthier plants. All of it came from garden and kitchen waste you would otherwise have thrown away. Once you have done a round, you will wonder why anyone bags their scraps for the bin."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-07-12T19:02:20.734Z","published":"2026-07-12T18:59:28.144Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}