Compost
Composting is basically just making a pile or
heap of green waste and stirring it until it is broken down. Green waste is
simply wetted down organic matter, such as leaves and food waste. Green waste
normally breaks down after a course of weeks but can also take as long as
months to break down. Compost is a key ingredient to organic farming.
There are many cool and unique ways to compost
food waste. After it breaks down it is recycled and used as fertilizer and soil
amendment. Compost waste is rich in nutrients which it is so good to use for
plant growth.
You can use one of many ways to create a compost
at the comfort of your own home. There are many composting benefits, like
introducing beneficial organisms to soil, it’s good for the environment, and it
reduces landfill waste. You can compost materials like animal manure, table
scraps, paper, and even wood chips. There are multitudes of organisms, fungus
and bacteria involved in the process of composting.
In composting, you will want green materials like
lawn and landscape trimmings to reduces the amount of nitrogen. More green
materials like fruit and vegetable peels would work great. Tea bags and coffee
grounds are brown but are just as potent as green materials when it comes to
nitrogen. For carbon, you’d want brown materials such as twigs, hay, and dry
leaves.
You’ll definitely want to keep water around the
compost pile to keep it moist. A compost pile needs oxygen to keep the bacteria
and fungus in the compost pile alive. You can add worms in the pile, and bugs
will find their way there.
To start it off, you’ll want your compost pile to
be about three feet deep, by three feet wide, by three feet tall (three cubic
feet). This gives enough insulation and food for the organisms to live.
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