Laserfiche WebLink
How to Make Compost, a Composting Guide <br />A complete guide <br />• ~~,~~~ to composting <br />http://www.compostguide.com/ <br />How to Make Compost, a Composting Guide <br />Home ~ Links ~ Compost Blog ~ Online Composting Store <br />x, . <br />x._.,:,,...., <br />tot. f:~ <br />~~ ~ ~~~ <br />~ ~*~~~"* <br />., <br />~. <br />;~ <br />>~..r <br />Click on photos to view those items. Buy composters online. <br />Why Make Compost? <br />Compost is one of nature's best mulches and soil amendments, and you can use it instead of commercial fertilizers. <br />Best of all, compost is cheap. You can make it without spending a cent. Using compost improves soil structure, <br />texture, and aeration and increases the soil's water-holding capacity. Compost loosens clay soils and helps sandy <br />soils retain water. Adding compost improves soil fertility and stimulates healthy root development in plants. The <br />organic matter provided in compost provides food for microorganisms, which keeps the soil in a healthy, balanced <br />condition. Nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus will be produced naturally by the feeding of microorganisms, so <br />few if any soil amendments will need to be added. <br />Most gardeners have long understood the value of this rich, dark, earthy material in improving the soil and creating <br />a healthful environment for plants. Understanding how to make and use compost is in the public interest, as the <br />problem of waste disposal climbs toward a crisis level. Landfills are brimming, and new sites are not likely to be <br />easily found. For this reason there is an interest in conserving existing landfill space and in developing alternative <br />methods of dealing with waste. Don't throw away materials when you can use them to improve your lawn and <br />garden! Start composting instead. <br />Our hands our being forced to deal creatively with our own yard waste, as one by one, cities are refusing to haul off <br />our leaves and grass clippings. About one third of the space in landfills is taken up with organic waste from our <br />yards and kitchens, just the type of material that can be used in compost. With a small investment in time, you can <br />contribute to the solution to a community problem, while at the same time enriching the soil and improving the <br />health of the plants on your property. <br />Want the super quick version of how to make compost? Visit our Composting Tips page. <br />The Compost Decomposition Process <br />Compost is the end product of a complex feeding pattern involving hundreds of different organisms, including <br />bacteria, fungi, worms, and insects. What remains after these organisms break down organic materials is the rich, <br />earthy substance your garden will love. Composting replicates nature's natural system of breaking down materials <br />on the forest floor. In every forest, grassland, jungle, and garden, plants die, fall to the ground, and decay. They are <br />slowly dismantled by the small organisms living in the soil. Eventually these plant parts disappear into the brown <br />crumbly forest floor. This humus keeps the soil light and fluffy. <br />• Humus is our goal when we start composting. By providing the right environment for the organisms in the compost <br />pile, it is possible to produce excellent compost. We usually want to organize and hasten Mother Nature's process. <br />By knowing the optimum conditions of heat, moisture, air, and materials, we can speed up the composting process. <br />Besides producing more good soil faster, making the compost faster creates heat which will destroy plant diseases <br />1 of 10 4/19/2007 2:47 PM <br />