Admittedly, the area of compost is usually not the best part of the garden. In fact, hides a black plastic cone (and garbage cans!) If, after much of the design of the garden is primarily in a small garden. A beautiful traditional English hive could only hide his answer.
The iconic beehive design was created by William Broughton Carr in the late 19 th century design and is known as a hive WBC. It was a way with old fruit boxes that were madethin wood. Bees like to be warm and a single layer of thin wood is not sufficient protection during the winter alone. WBC created an outer layer of overlapping wooden crates stacked on each other and the other with a sloping roof of the rain away. Between the two layers was filled a gap where the insulation so that the bees could be comfortable throughout the winter. The design of this outer shell also has to pass a bio-bin, if the wood is used more often in those days.
The stackingWBC hive boxes of design can be accommodated for a good cause for composting, especially if used over a beehive. When the hive is full first, the second has started and the time is filled with content of that first started to fall. Now the top box can be removed and grounded to third to start the stack. And so on, with a small field from each of the compost on the lower level. (The lower hook that you really need coverage of the third).
Beehive composter comein different sizes from 250L to 495L, but on the small side for the needs of compost. It would be a very small garden, able to manage with a single 250L organic waste and even the larger sizes are not large enough for the compost to get "hot". (For more information about hot products such as compost see link below).
One thing to be careful when you buy a compost timber in the wood is rotting! Most of the beehive composter on the market "pressure treated." What's hidden behind this seemingly innocuousSentence is that the pressure is used to treat the wood with an insecticide. Until recently, treatment, toxic heavy metals arsenic, chromium and copper. The recognition by the liquor authority that arsenic and chromium in their immediate vicinity will have brought their limited use. Copper is still part of the treatment. Good composting is to promote a thriving population of micro-organisms and placing them next to insecticides is not a good idea not to forget thepotential contamination such as heavy metals accumulate over time.
There are natural ways to preserve the wood, and even the heartwood of some trees such as eucalyptus and red cedar contains natural preservatives. Unfortunately, there is a beehive composter made at the time in these forests. Linseed oil or green colors can be used on bare wood as a protective layer, although sooner or later with the addition of wood for the primary decomposers is a recipe for disaster. It 'a little' how to put aJar of honey bees and next to them are expected to ignore it! The heat treatment and acetylation of wood to make the environment unattractive, the microbes, and these methods can be the life of the wood without damaging the final product range, to extend compost brown.
The trade-off with a beehive composter is if you think that their aesthetic pleasure is worth its price. According to the composting system, not the more expensive (unless two of them)!
For details of a beehiveComposting is not available from pressure-treated wood and on the Internet at the link below.
We have a long tradition of painting hives so there is really no limit to how beautiful you make your compost area - adorn you!
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