Here is how we built our compost bins:
Material: Wooden pallets* are free and available at many retail stores. You can also find them inexpensively on local sites such as Facebook Marketplace.
Tools: a shovel, a battery-powered screwdriver, and a small sledge hammer.
Supplies: one box of 1-5/8” deck screws, and four 24” pieces of rebar (reinforcing bar, available at any home-improvement store). We used a few pieces of rock to help level the pallets before connecting them.
This is a two-person job. It can be achieved by one person with certain tools, like a large clamp.
Step 1: Gather materials. We obtained ten 4’x4’ wooden pallets and gathered the required tools and supplies.
Step 2: Level the ground. We roughly leveled the site with a shovel.
Step 3: Build the walls. We formed the walls by attaching the pallets to each other with the deck screws. You can use as many screws as you see fit on both sides of the pallet panes. This ensures the pallets are connected tightly and level from top to bottom.
Step 4: Continue building the walls. Repeat Step 3. We assembled the three sides of the bin in a horseshoe shape. To prevent compost from getting stuck in the walls of the pallet, we arranged the pallets with the slats facing inwards and situated horizontally. We used rocks to fill the gaps between the pallets and the ground, ensuring flush walls. For a home compost bin, you may want to enclose the square with a hinged pallet to be used as a gate.
Step 5: Stake the bins. We staked the bins by driving a rebar into the ground at each corner. This stabilizes the bins.
Voila! We made 2 bins connected together so we could fill one bin to the top then begin filling the second bin while the first compost is breaking down.
Note: Our wooden pallets were donated by RCMGA long-time supporter Gordon Killebrew, well-known for building bird houses from wooden pallets. He has built over 10,000 of them and given them away to schools and various organizations.
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