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HOW TO COMPOST
An Overview
Getting Started
  Making Decisions
  Systems (Methods)
Making Compost
  What a Good Pile Needs
  What You Need
  Extras & Additives
  What to Use - or Not!
  Building the Pile
  Maintenance
  When is it Finished?
  Troubleshooting
Outdoor Digesters
  Anaerobic
  Aerobic
Indoor Methods
  Vermicomposting (Worms)
  Bokashi
Using Compost
Just Do It
Composting Science
  Physics
  Chemistry
  Biology
Soil Science
  More Than Just Dirt
  Garden Soil
  Myth Busting
Environmental Issues
  Garbage Gripes
  Water & Soil Remediation
  Nutrient Pollution
  Harmful Chemicals
A Few Concerns
  Pathogens
  Pesticides
  Heavy Metals
  What You Can Do
Additional Resources


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Aerobic Digesters: The Green Cone Composter

The Basics

Green ConeThe Green Cone is not a composting system at all since it is designed not to produce compost but to provide a convenient, environmental way to dispose of kitchen waste. That's the first source of confusion associated with this item.

Second, there's the matter of its appearance. It looks like an anaerobic composter and it's constructed like one. It consists of a completely enclosed bin above ground with a partially open bottom underground. Like anaerobic composters, the Green Cone can be fed any kitchen waste except the greasiest and highest-fat items: left-over salad dressing, old mayonnaise, rancid butter and so on.

There is one significant difference between the cone and the anaerobic systems: it's aerobic! In order to make sense of this, it's necessary to look at the cone's construction.

Construction

The Green Cone consists of a double-walled upper cone attached to a deep basket below. It's installed by burying underground the basket and the top inch (3 cm.) of the cone. This should be done in a sunny, well-drained location. Food dropped into the basket breaks down into primarily water and carbon dioxide. Residue builds up so slowly that the basket does not need to be emptied more than once a year.

This basket, or digestion chamber, is much more open than the bottoms of most anaerobic digesters. Two thirds of the material in the open part of the basket has been cut away. Ideally, all the feedstock is in the basket, so all of it is exposed to the air and the organisms in the soil around it. In an anaerobic digester, most of the feedstock is in the pile above the source of oxygen, which is at the bottom of the vessel. Though the cone appears so similar to other digesters, it is different in crucial ways.

The translucent green wall of the Cone is lined with a second, opaque black cone. Less than an inch of space separates the two. This arrangement allows the air between them to heat up efficiently. Since the black cone is open at top and bottom, the hot air can flow into the main compartment, heating it and the contents of the basket. As a result, temperatures inside a Green Cone will be significantly higher than those in a home-made anaerobic composter with only a single wall. The double walls, which trap heat by day, also insulate the cone against heat loss at night.

All-in-all, it's a pretty nifty system.

Feedstock

The Green Cone can cope with the same wide range of kitchen scraps that can go into an anaerobic digester. There are no disagreements about whether the system can process meats safely: the answer is yes. The instructions warn that no more than 50% of the contents should be meat. After all the warnings about not composting meat at all, this seems quite liberal. However, yard waste, even grass cuttings, should not go into the cone.


Source: Solarcone, Inc.



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