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6 votes
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The Top Ten Worst Hit Songs of 2018 (Pt. 1)
8 votes -
State of the Sanderson 2018
12 votes -
What were the best games you played this year?
What made them great? Who would you recommend them to? Don't feel like you have to limit yourself to 2018 releases either. I'm interested in whatever you played and enjoyed regardless of when it...
What made them great? Who would you recommend them to?
Don't feel like you have to limit yourself to 2018 releases either. I'm interested in whatever you played and enjoyed regardless of when it came out.
41 votes -
Pornhub Insights - 2018 Year in Review (graphs and NSFW text; no explicit images)
22 votes -
Four perfectly reasonable-sounding 2018 technology predictions that failed
8 votes -
The state of web browsers - 2019 edition
7 votes -
NPR presents their top fifty picks for the best albums of 2018, with reviews and listening links
14 votes -
America’s thirty-eight essential restaurants
4 votes -
The 100 greatest innovations of 2018
6 votes -
The gifts we want to give in 2018
5 votes -
Super typhoon Yutu, 'strongest storm of 2018,' slams US Pacific Territory
10 votes -
Crack the code hidden in the UK's NCSC 2018 Annual Review
3 votes -
2018 compost yield so far
Cross-posted with /r/composting I'm pretty proud of the results of my first year of serious composting (before this year, my method was, "dump kitchen scraps in a pile and turn it occasionally"),...
Cross-posted with /r/composting
I'm pretty proud of the results of my first year of serious composting (before this year, my method was, "dump kitchen scraps in a pile and turn it occasionally"), so I figured I'd share. Here's a picture of the pile, opened up yesterday for turning/dumping fresh kitchen scraps. Closer view, and even closer. As you can see, it still has a ways to go. It consists of mostly kitchen scraps, grass clippings, and oak leaves, and I guess the latter of those takes quite a while to break down. Here's a picture of it covered with a tarp after I was done, yesterday.
This is actually a combination of eight different smaller piles I worked on throughout the year while I was teaching myself to make compost. The first piles I made were basically just the result of mowing some tall grass/wild plants in the spring--I had thought that since I was mowing up both leaves and grass that the ratio would be just right for composting. I was wrong. Those three piles didn't really go anywhere. I should've added far more leaf matter, kept them wetter, and combined them into one rather than three.
The fourth pile was a combination of kitchen scraps and leaf matter. I had about a 1/2:1 ratio of leaf matter to kitchen scraps. It turned out okay, but of course, I should've added more browns. The fifth pile (featuring a guest who liked the "fresh greens" that I often went outside to spray onto the pile, if you catch my drift...) started out with probably a 1:1 ratio of browns to greens and ended up with a 2:1 ratio, since I started actually figuring things out. I used both mowed-up leaves and mowed-up household paper waste for my browns, and kitchen scraps and grass clippings for my greens. The pile did end up getting fairly warm. I turned it every 2-4 days.
The sixth and seventh piles were nothing but oak leaves mixed with grass clippings. I wasn't great about getting the ratios exactly right, but they were both probably close to 1 1/2:1 browns to greens. Both heated up after I turned them, every few days, and turned out great. I think I do have some pictures, but can't find them.
I started using a tarp with my eighth pile, and that tarp, as well as the increased amount of browns--always at least 2:1--made a huge difference, as previously I had a hard time keeping piles at the right moisture level. Either they'd dry out in the sun or they'd get soaked in the rain. The tarp protected from both and helped insulate the pile, enabling it to get to the right temperature despite being fairly small.
I tried to follow the Berkeley method closely (other than that I added to it every time I turned it). If I added new scraps, I let it sit for four days; otherwise, I turned it every other day. I started adding pretty much anything to it. One time while I was turning it, I found a dessicated dead robin nearby and tossed that in. There was no trace of it the next time I turned the pile.
Fairly recently, I combined all of my piles into one, as you saw above. This makes it a lot harder to turn, but it seems to be going well. Instead of making a new pile and letting this one sit, I've continued adding to this one every week, when I turn it (now that it's this big, it's hard to find time to turn it more often than that). I'm not sure if I'll be able to do this through winter. I've been stocking up on coffee grounds from Starbucks (I have maybe 8 bags of them sitting in the garage?) to help me keep it going, but it gets pretty cold here in Michigan. Maybe I should start a new pile in the winter rather than keeping this one going; I haven't decided, yet. I'm happy to hear your suggestions.
Thanks for reading! Tremendous thanks to /r/composting; everyone there is incredibly helpful, and there are many very knowledgeable folks there. I couldn't have learned this much about composting without them. I've offered them my five invitations, so hopefully we can eventually get the same kind of composting/gardening discussion over here!
I'm hardly an expert after just one year of composting, but I'm happy to answer any questions you have about my methods, about composting in general, or about how you might get started.
Now for some bonus pics, just for fun:
A bear admiring my pile
That same bear about to destroy a bird feeder... D'oh.
Compost/Hugelkultur-in-progress (I'm not sure how people find the time to gather enough woody materials/grass clippings to make a hugelkultur all at once!)22 votes -
The current state of Shonen Jump in 2018
5 votes -
The world's most liveable cities in 2018
2 votes -
How musicians make money — or don’t at all — in 2018
7 votes -
What are your favorite movies of 2018 so far?
For me it's Blindspotting, Eighth Grade, Hearts Beat Loud, Isle of Dogs, Ready Player One, and of course Infinity War.
8 votes -
Huawei overtakes Apple to become number two in smartphone sales in Q2 2018
5 votes -
How in 2015, $364 Billion flowed through two and four year public universities and colleges of the states of the USA
4 votes -
Defending land and environmental rights has become an increasingly deadly endeavor
7 votes -
British public bought £14bn of goods made by slaves in 2017, claims report
8 votes -
The millions: The great second-half 2018 book preview
3 votes -
Best twenty paid iOS games with no in-app purchases for iPhone and iPad of 2018
5 votes -
It's the exact half way point of 2018
How was the first half for your goals in life and work or spending or saving. Or just making it to the half way point
21 votes -
Best albums released so far this year?
What do you guys think are the best albums released so far this year? Obviously this is subjective, I'd just like to hear some of your opinions :-) My favourites out of the ones I can remember...
What do you guys think are the best albums released so far this year? Obviously this is subjective, I'd just like to hear some of your opinions :-)
My favourites out of the ones I can remember are:
- Kids See Ghosts by Kids See Ghosts
- Egg on face. Foot in mouth. Wriggling Wriggling Wriggling. by Crywank
- Moe Moe by Moe Shop
- Little Dark Age by MGMT
- Veteran by JPEGMAFIA
19 votes