Garden Waste Recycling Scheme
Time and dates of the scheme
The scheme operates from April to October during British Summer Time to ensure the safety of the collection crews.
The first garden waste collection will be Monday 30th March and the calendars will start to be delivered two weeks before and will be added to this website.
During this time, maximising the use of the vehicle fleet is possible by using a double shift of refuse vehicles. Earlier dark evenings mean that the second shift cannot collect safely later in the year. The summer months are also the most efficient period to collect because most garden waste is generated.
To find out when your bins are due for collection please see our garden waste collection date pages. Bins are emptied on the same day every fortnight, including bank holidays.
Garden waste collections take place between 7am and 9pm. However, if your bin has not been emptied by 9pm on your collection day please do leave the bin out longer than this as the collection crew could be running late.
Bin sizes
A 240 litre green bin is used for the collection of garden waste. (The same size as the current black refuse bin). Bins are not available in any other size.
Why it is important to get biodegradable waste out of landfill
Targets have been set to reduce the amount of biodegradable waste sent to landfill, this includes paper, garden and food waste.
These items are amongst the most dangerous elements of household rubbish sent to landfill. When they rot down they generate methane, this greenhouse gas is 30 times more harmful than carbon dioxide.
Garden waste can be put to good use by converting it into compost and re-introducing it to your garden. It will help to improve the texture, drainage and aeration of the soil and adds nutrients. It is also an environmentally friendly alternative to peat based products.
Home composting and a green waste scheme provide a combined approach to disposing of biodegradable waste. Items such as large woody waste that will take a long time to break down can be put in the green bin, whereas uncooked kitchen waste, such as vegetable peelings, can go in your home compost bin and be re-introduced back into your own garden as a soil conditioner.
What can go in the bin
- Grass cuttings
- Hedge & shrub clippings
- Plants & weeds
- Leaves
- Twigs
- Branches and bark
- Cut flowers
- Pot plant compost
- Cardboard
Garden waste can be put in the bin loose. Plastic bags act as contaminants and do not compost down. There is no problem putting items treated with weed killer in the green bin. At the composting facility the composting process works better than in a garden pile and the weed killers will either be broken down organically or be diluted down to a point where they don't harm the compost
The scheme is for garden waste only. If the waste collected included any food waste either cooked or uncooked it would have to be treated differently at the composting plant.
Cardboard can go in the blue bin and also the new green bin. It may be beneficial to put some cardboard at the bottom of the green bin to absorb any moisture from grass cuttings. Types of cardboard most suitable are large brown cardboard boxes, wine carriers, egg boxes and insides of toilet / kitchen roll.
What can't go in the bin
- Any type of Plastic
- Bin liners
- Plastic bags
- Plant pots
- Food or kitchen waste
- Soil, turf, ash or garden chemicals
- Stones or rubble
- DIY rubbish, timber or sawdust
- Animal waste or bedding
- Metal or glass
Bins containing any of these materials will not be emptied
What to do if you don't want a bin
If you do not have any garden waste, you can opt out of the scheme. However, garden waste will no longer be accepted in the black wheeled bin in the areas that receive the garden waste scheme. If however, you live in the pilot area and do not want a bin but would like to home compost, you can apply for a subsidised compost bins.
Alternatively, garden waste can be taken to Nuffield Household Waste Recycling Centre or one of the Mobile Recyling Collection Points.
Once we have removed the garden waste
We will take the garden waste to ECO Composting
where it is first shredded, then piled into long heaps called windrows. The piles can reach a temperature of over 70 degrees centigrade, high enough to kill weeds and plant diseases. This material then decomposes into nutrient rich soil improver/conditioner. The compost can be used for many products.
