My plastic compost bin is full of slugs, is this correct? except how can i return with rid of them ? ...


You can throw it regularly.you should also try to stop intake foods which you think are slugy


If you can hold them in the compost bin afterwards all capably & good as slugs capture rid of all the deleterious oxidents in the compost, so it will be well-mannered come next year when you want to use it. Just label sure they're not in the compost when you come to spread it on the garden.

To receive rid of slugs.. I find that the heel of a wellie boot is pretty efficient.
Answers:    Some people believe the compost bin is a hothouse for slug and snail reproductive flurry, creating massive populations that will invade the garden and devour the precious plants. Slugs and snails are decomposer organisms that help break down the life matter surrounded by the compost bin so the bin acts as a great feed ground for them. There is no guarantee that the slugs and snails will not be tempted to other areas of your garden, but the compost mountain provides them with an wonderful habitat they have no justification to leave as they own a constant food source and are protected from predators - they keep moving up the bin to achieve to the fresh material, and eventually die of antediluvian age. Some slugs live only on rotting natural matter and so will own no desire to leave the compost bin surrounded by search of living greens. Some inhabitants worry that when they spread the finished compost, they will spread around slug eggs; however, it is credible these will be predated on in the compost bin or will moulder as they become compressed within the mountain.
On no account should slug pellet or other molluscides/insecticides be used in compost, as they will gun down the benefical organisms that carry out the composting process. Good luck :-)