What is compost?
The logistics of the spread of composting material on lawns or gardens is a problem that all homeowners are facing. Small units used to spread fertilizers or seeds of grass often fail when they are pushed into operation to expand the compost. This is because the composting material usually contains large pieces that clog the rotating blade at the bottom of the spreader. Some gardeners prepare home softening, which wins a looser, finer material and retains the rest, which can then be returned to a pile or break down more thoroughly. Yet the composting material will never flow through a standard spreading with easy grass seed or finely ground fertilizer. However, this is impractical on the large land of the lawn or garden, and many Homeawers are growing about handling the compost based on manure. Since composting has become more and more accepted by practice, many manufacturers have been saved to create a compost spreader that would actually work.
among the simplest of these is the green COMPOST Spreader® culture, basically a large drum connected to the handle. Baked as "low impact", uses the inner grid formula to chop the composting material when it spins in the drum and then releases it down. The compost is added by the side door and the unit can be pulled by a small tractor.
BullSPREADER® based in Texas developed a composting spreader specifically for fertilizer and laid it to a depth of 1/inches per three inches (0.63 to 7.62 centimeters). The company's website comes with recorded cattle sounds, but says little about how the product works, except what it uses "patented" devices. BullSPReader® creates motor and hand -rolled models.
One of the more sophisticated compost models is the Eco-Law Applicator®, produced by Compostwerks. The motorized unit was placed on a three -wheel base and is designedSo that she is behind him like a rototiller. The width and intensity of the application can be controlled as a Hugs machine along.
No matter what, but the compost spreader still has its limitations. Most require that the material that spreads is not at the top of a certain percentage of moisture. Again, this requires some preparation with the compost itself.