Keep Composting All Winter!
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Polar vortex or not, winter can be a challenging time to compost. Whether you’re dealing with frozen compost or wading through hip-deep snow to your bin, many Manitobans feel discouraged when it comes to keeping up with the composting year-round. But fear not, this is your demystifying guide to winter composting – yes, even in -30˚C!
Indoor Options
Do cold temperatures send you shivering indoors with a blanket, hot cocoa (or mulled cider), and a big dose of denial until spring? Then vermicomposting or Bokashi composting might be for you!
Vermicomposting
This nifty compost method involves a bin (you can purchase one or make one yourself out of two Rubbermaid containers), and some special worms called red wriggler, or Eisinia Fetida. Some shredded paper or coconut coir, dampened, makes a perfect bedding for the worms, which you then feed fruit and vegetable scraps. They can consume approximately half their body weight in food scraps per week, and their population will grow or shrink to accommodate how much you feed them.
Bokashi Composting
Bo-who? Bokashi isn’t technically a composting method, but rather a way of fermenting your food scraps to produce pre-compost which will break down quickly in your garden come spring. There’s plenty of online tutorials on how to do this. The bonus? Unlike vermicomposting, you can include meat and bones because the acidity of the fermenting kills off pathogens. Because you keep it lidded, it keeps for quite a while and doesn’t smell. The downside is that the finished product isn’t actually compost, and there can be some cost to keeping yourself supplied with the Bokashi mix (a mixture of beneficial micro-organisms and bran).
Pay Someone Else to Do It For You!
If you have meat and dairy scraps, if you find compost icky, or hate venturing out into the cold, Compost Winnipeg might be your answer. This social enterprise will take meat, dairy, oils, napkins, bones, and food-soiled paper, on top of your usual fruit and vegetable scraps (you’ll still have to find your own solution for pet waste though). Contact info@compostwinnipeg.ca for pricing and to see if we’re serving your neighbourhood.
Use Somebody Else’s Bin
In a few neighbourhoods, there are community compost bins run by community gardens or community associations. These bins can accept plant-based waste only, so keep the meat, dairy, bones, and oil out! This is a good option if you don’t mind carrying your bin over and if you have a smaller amount of compost to dump – some of the sites can fill up as many people use them through the winter.
In the end, there’s no reason why you can’t continue using your backyard bin in the winter. Got questions? Comments? Comment below or shoot us an email at compost@greenactioncentre.ca
More Resources
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Other Presentations/Workshops

Vermicomposting Basics and getting started
Learn how our worm friends can make a rich fertilizer, right in your classroom! This presentation includes hands-on time exploring red wriggler worms. We'll discuss what composting is, why it matters, and how to care for a vermicomposting bin.
Vermicomposting Basics and getting started
Learn how our worm friends can make a rich fertilizer, right in your classroom! This presentation includes hands-on time exploring red wriggler worms. We'll discuss what composting is, why it matters, and how to care for a vermicomposting bin.

Green Commuting Options
Get the tools and tips you need to ride your bike, hop on a bus, carpool, or walk to work and elsewhere. Learn how to use the various transit tools, plan your route to bike to work, and begin thinking of your daily travel options in a whole new way. Create a commute that you�ll enjoy!
Green Commuting Options
Get the tools and tips you need to ride your bike, hop on a bus, carpool, or walk to work and elsewhere. Learn how to use the various transit tools, plan your route to bike to work, and begin thinking of your daily travel options in a whole new way. Create a commute that you�ll enjoy!

Bike Route Planning
Learn the ins and outs of the Winnipeg Cycling Map to plan a bike route that suits your comfort level. Become familiar with the various types of infrastructure � from cycletracks to sharrows to bike lanes. Find tips and tools to help you ride more often to more places.
Bike Route Planning
Learn the ins and outs of the Winnipeg Cycling Map to plan a bike route that suits your comfort level. Become familiar with the various types of infrastructure � from cycletracks to sharrows to bike lanes. Find tips and tools to help you ride more often to more places.

Buy Less, Fix More, Trade Often
Have you ever thought about the resources required to make your cell phone? Or what it took to produce the jeans you are wearing? From resource extraction to disposal, the materials economy has created a linear system of consumption on the finite planet we call home. This presentation covers ways to help our planet � buy�less,�fix�more, trade often, and divert all waste from the landfill.
Buy Less, Fix More, Trade Often
Have you ever thought about the resources required to make your cell phone? Or what it took to produce the jeans you are wearing? From resource extraction to disposal, the materials economy has created a linear system of consumption on the finite planet we call home. This presentation covers ways to help our planet � buy�less,�fix�more, trade often, and divert all waste from the landfill.
