You can use your shreddings to help create and maintain a healthy garden by using them as a mulch. You can also turn the shreddings into a useful compost.
Mulching helps to conserve water and control weeds with a minimum of effort. Mulching gives you the opportunity to producen an attractive ground covering at minimal cost. Mulching helps to protect plant roots from the soil-compacting effect of foot traffic. It can also help reduce the effect of heavy rain compacting the soil or washing it away.
Home-made compost is an ideal way of adding nutrients to your soil and of providing the right conditions for many garden plants to grow. Almost everything in the shreddings can be composted including conifer and other evergreen material.
Most shreddings can be used straight away on paths to improve look and durability, just spread them evenly over the desired area. They can be useful for wet areas where they soak up moisture and so reduce the likelihood of slipping accidents.
Before using shreddings as a mulch garden beds, remove any weeds and water the ground thoroughly. Apply the shreddings so that you make a layer about 5cm (2in) deep. Do not dig the shreddings in. Keep the mulch on the surface to help conserve nutrient levels in the soil below. If you mulch under trees, it minimises competition for water and nutrients and helps trees grow as they would in nature. Try to keep the mulch about 20cm (8in) away from the base of tree trunks. If your shreddings are composed mainly of conifer material and you want to use them as a mulch, they are best composted first.
You can add the shreddings to your compost bin or heap, either as they are, or mixed in with other items like leaves and grass. If the shreddings are dry, you should wet them through. If you have a lot of woody material in your shreddings, it helps decomposition by adding grass mowings, nettle liquid or diluted urine. Nettle liquid is from nettles that have been squashed into a bucket and covered with water for two weeks.
If you decide to leave your shreddings in the bags as they were left with you, they will turn into compost naturally on their own if they are damp. Just pierce half a dozen holes in each bag and wet well. After about six months they can be used in the same way as compost.
No! Shredderman is an initiative to help reduce the amount of waste taken to Household Waste and Recycling facilities. It aims to help householders to divert waste away from landfill sites which are becoming scarcer and more expensive to use. So please make use of your shreddings in and around the garden and do not take them to a Waste Site.
Please call the Mission Impossible team on 01905 768255 if you have further questions.