Home and Garden Tips
Composting
What is Compost?
Compost is a dark, crumbly mixture of decomposed organic matter, such as
grass clippings, leaves, twigs, and branches.
How Does Composting Work?
Even the first-time composter can make good quality compost. Like good
cooking, composting is part science, part art. Attention to the following
parameters will help you get started.
Materials
Anything that was once alive will naturally decompose. However, some organic
wastes should not be composted at home.
DO compost these items: grass clippings, leaves, plant stalks, hedge
trimmings, old potting soil, twigs, annual weeds without seed heads, vegetable
scraps, coffee filters, and tea bags.
Do NOT compost these items: diseased plants, weeds with seed heads, invasive
weeds such a quack grass and moring glory, pet feces, dead animals, bread and
grains, meat or fish parts, dairy products, grease, cooking oil, or oily foods.
Making It Work
To prepare compost, organic material, microorganisms, air, water, and a small
amount of nitrogen are needed.
Organic material is leaves, grass clippings, etc. that you are trying to
decompose. Microorganisms are small forms of plant and animal life, which break
down the organic material. A small amount of garden soil or manure provides
sufficient microorganisms.
The nitrogen, air, and water provide a favorable environment for the
microorganisms to make the compost. A small amount of nitrogen fertilizer can
add sufficient nitrogen to the compost. You can purchase nitrogen fertilizers at
many hardware stores, feed stores, or nurseries.
Air is the only part which cannot be added in excess. Too much nitrogen can
kill microbes; too much water causes insufficient air in the pile.
Biology
Bacteria are the first to break down plant tissue and are the most numerous
and effective compost makers in your compost pile. Fungi and protozoans soon
join the bacteria and, somewhat later in the cycle, centipedes, millipedes,
beetles, and worms complete the composting process.
Surface Area
If the microorganisms have more surface area to feed on, the materials will
break down faster. Chopping your garden debris with a machete, or using a
chipper, shredder, or lawnmower to shred materials will help them decompose
faster.
Volume
Compost piles trap heat generated by the activity of millions of
microorganisms. A 3-foot by 3-foot by 3-foot compost pile is considered a
minimum size for hot, fast composting. Piles wider or taller than 5 feet don't
allow enough air to reach the microorganisms at the center.
Moisture and Aeration
The microorganisms in the compost pile function best when the materials are
as damp as a wrung-out sponge and have many air passages. Extremes of sun or
rain can adversely affect the balance of air and moisture in your pile. The air
in the pile is usually used up faster than the moisture, so the materials must
be turned or mixed up occasionallly to add air that will sustain high
temperatures and control odor. Materials can be turned with a pitchfork, rake,
or other garden tool.
Time and Temperature
The most efficient decomposing bacteria thrive in temperatures between 110F
and 160F. Thus, the hotter the pile, the faster the composting. If you achieve a
good balance of carbon and nitrogen, provide lots of surface area within a large
volume of material, and maintain adequate moisture and aeration, the temperature
will rise over several days.
Uses for Compost
Compost contains nutrients, but it is not a substitute for fertilizers.
Compost holds nutrients in the soil until plants can use them, loosens and
aerates clay soils, and retains water in sandy soils.
To use as a soil amendment, mix 2 to 5 inches of compost into vegetable and
flower gardens each year before planting.
In a potting mixture, add one part compost to two parts commercial potting
soil, or make your own mixture by using equal parts of compost and sand or
perlite.
As a mulch, spread an inch or two of compost around annual flowers and
vegetables, and up to 6 inches around trees and shrubs.
As a top dressing, mix finely sifted compost with sand and sprinkle evenly
over lawns.
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