Compost Tumblers
Mother tests several compost tumblers and shares results, including tumbler styles, feature pros and cons, operating factors, test results.
Story and photos by Brook Elliott
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You've seen the ads: "Now you can have dark, rich
compost in just a few weeks!" What an appealing
message. Whether you grow flowers, vegetables, herbs or
houseplants, compost is "black gold" in the garden. We
never have enough of it, and can't make it fast enough.
Compost tumblers, the ads say, can give us a steady supply
every couple of weeks. Designed so you can crank, turn or
roll the container to turn and aerate the compost, tumblers
come in several sizes.
Before you run out and buy one, however, be aware that
those headlines are advertising hyperbole at best. In our
tests, tumblers did not produce finished compost any faster
than a well-managed compost bin or open pile.
To be sure, the ingredients appear to be composting faster
because you are likely to turn the contents more often in a
tumbler, thus introducing air—one of the four vital
ingredients (the others being nitrogen, carbon and
water)—that is necessary to turn vegetable matter
into compost. But if you build an open pile the same size
as a tumbler's capacity, use the same ingredients in both
and turn the open pile whenever you rotate the tumbler,
they will produce compost in the same general time frame.
So, why should you buy a compost tumbler?
Last summer we conducted a field test of various compost
tumblers versus open compost piles. Although most of us at
MOTHER use cold composting methods (substituting time for
the work of maintaining a hot pile), we ran a hot pile as a
control.
Under our environmental conditions, both the open (hot)
pile control and the tumblers yielded rich, finished
compost in about 10 weeks—a far ay from the 14 days
some of the manufacturers claim. The tumblers were
certainly easier to use than turning an open pile with a
pitchfork, but they did not appreciably increase the speed
of production when compared to a properly managed open
pile. Ease of turning is probably the main benefit tumblers
offer, but as you will see below, some are easier to turn
than others.
Although the decomposition time is not increased, compost
tumblers do have advantages in addition to ease of turning.
By and large, they are clean, neat, unobtrusive,
pest-resistant and odor-free. Because of this, tumblers
often can be used in urban and suburban areas, where local
laws or restrictive covenants may prohibit open compost
piles.
One pleasant surprise during the testing, in what turned
out to be a drought year, was that the enclosed tumblers
retained moisture better than the open pile, which had to
be watered frequently.
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