How to start making your own compost
Home composting works best when you balance three key elements: air, moisture, and warmth. This combination keeps your compost active without producing harmful gases like methane.
The best time to start is in the spring. Warmer weather helps organic materials rot down faster and gives your compost a head start.
Place your bin on a level, well-drained spot, ideally on bare soil in partial sunlight. This allows worms and microbes to access the compost from below. If you’re setting up on concrete or decking, consider creating a raised bed to sit your compost bin on. This will avoid staining and help encourage the essential organisms that break down the waste.
Top Tip: Add a 10cm layer of coarse, dry material at the bottom – twigs or small branches work well. Fountain Timber's Woodland Mulch is our recommended option here, as it will help aerate the base and provide an early boost of organic matter.

Building the layers
Balance greens and browns for healthy compost
For compost to heat up and decompose properly, it needs a mix of ‘greens’ and ‘browns’.
Greens include wet, quick-rotting materials like grass clippings, fruit scraps, and vegetable peelings.
Browns are drier materials like pruned branches, cardboard, and plant stems.
A good mix of both ensures your compost stays active and doesn’t become too wet or dry. Crushed eggshells can be added for extra minerals, and cardboard or egg boxes help create air pockets.
Add a thin layer of soil or well-rotted manure after every few layers to introduce fungi and bacteria that help kickstart the breakdown. If you don’t have any available, a sprinkle of ready-made compost like Bracken Down or SylvaGrow® Farmyard Soil Improver will help inoculate your compost with beneficial microbes.
Cover your bin with a piece of tarpaulin, old carpet, or polythene, and leave it to break down. Most composts take around 3 months to begin turning into usable material.

What to compost
Feed your compost the right ingredients
Here’s what you can and should add to your compost bin:
Uncooked vegetable trimmings and fruit peelings
Tea bags and coffee grounds
Grass clippings and soft plant cuttings
Fallen leaves
Cotton or wool fabrics (in small pieces)
Scrunched paper or cardboard egg boxes
Need more dry matter to balance out wet kitchen waste? Consider topping up with a small amount of our Topsoil Blended Loam. This fine-textured soil helps improve structure and provides a clean, pest-free base layer.
Avoid composting:
Meat, dairy, oily foods, pet waste, soiled nappies, diseased plants, or perennial weed roots. These can attract pests, slow decomposition, or introduce problems into your compost.
Keeping your compost healthy
Air, balance and patience
The microbes breaking down your waste need enough air and moisture to stay active. If the compost looks too wet, add more browns like dry leaves or cardboard. If it seems too dry, add more greens like grass clippings or fruit peel.
Here are a few practical tips:
Chop everything into small pieces – it speeds up the process.
Mix or turn the contents every few weeks to add oxygen.
Layer greens and browns consistently to maintain balance.
For gardeners who compost regularly, it’s helpful to have two bins – one to fill while the other rests and breaks down. You’ll always have compost on the go and avoid interrupting the cycle.
Want to give your homemade compost a boost? Try combining it with our SylvaGrow® Growing Medium. It’s a peat-free, nutrient-rich compost that can supplement your homemade mix for even better results, especially in containers or raised beds.

Composting for long-term success
Build a routine that works for your garden
Making compost isn’t complicated, but it does take time and care. Once you’ve established a routine, your garden will benefit season after season. As well as allowing your plants to thrive, you’ll also be reducing waste and helping the environment. The list of benefits is a long one!
Looking for more natural ways to condition your soil? Our full range of soil conditioners, including Multipurpose Compost, offers reliable, peat-free options that support strong, sustainable plant growth.
How can we help?
If you’d like advice on which compost, mulch or soil conditioner would suit your garden best, please do get in touch. We’re happy to help you find the right product.
As ever, the information and advice in this article are provided in good faith and are designed to give general guidance. Any reliance you place on such information is therefore strictly at your own risk. If in doubt, we strongly recommend you seek professional assistance.