How to Compost: The Most Natural Method of Gardening Available

Susan Hamlin
Gardeners, if you have not learned to compost for fertilization, fall is a perfect time to start. Why? To take advantage of all those fallen leaves, of course!

Why Compost?

Composting is an economical and environmentally-sound way to fertilize your soil. It makes for the richest growing soil available, as compost is high in potassium, phosphorus, nitrogen. If you are composting, you are almost duplicating Mother Nature's plan for the lushest forests and natural gardens.

A gardener who composts is greatly helping the environment by reusing what is otherwise treated as "garbage" and merely rotting away in dumps and landfills. It's estimated that such waste material takes up about a third of the space in our community landfills. Why not put this material to good use and use it to grow our lawns and gardens?

Do You Need Special Equipment to Compost?

A shredder will come in handy for your composting projects. This will make your material smaller for easier storage as you go along, and there are some quite inexpensive available gas or electric shredders for sale, especially if you do your shopping online. Just enter "discount shredders composting" in your search engine, and you will come up with several pages of great places from which to order your chipper/shredder.

Then make sure you have lots of bags and bins to store your composted material. You will probably want a large pail in the kitchen specifically for organic waste. Make sure the pail has a tight lid to keep out animals and bugs. You can also find great bargains on composting bins online by using the "discount" term in your search engine. There are also compost tumblers for mixing your organic matter efficiently.

You will also find a compost thermometer handy to make sure your compost piles are decomposed efficiently.

What Material Can You Use to Compost?

Fall leaves are perfect for composting. Rake them and store them for later shredding, or shred them as you go along.

Nearly anything organic can be used for your compost. In the kitchen, it may take some time to condition your family but you will soon find it a habit to use the compost pile. There you can save eggshells (crushed), corncobs (shred), peelings, rinds, peanut shells, and coffee grounds. Dairy and meat products can be used in compost, but they are going to smell badly, so if you use them in your compost, you will want to bury them under everything else in your pail -- and make sure you are using the lid! You can put liquids like kitchen rinsewater into the container, but you will want to make sure they are in the middle to encourage the other materials to rot.

Avoid any oil, fish, bones, or grease. They do not decompose efficiently and are more likely to cause an unpleasant smell than to help your garden.

Other Common Household Materials:

If you have household pets, you may be tempted to use their droppings, fur, or hair. While manure from many barnyard animals can be great for fertilization, most household pets commonly are disease carriers even when the animal itself is not sick, and it is not wise to use their droppings in compost. Hair is all right for compost, but it has to be quite well scattered around and not left in clumps.

Dead houseplants can be used in compost, but they must be handled carefully and this is somewhat impractical. You don't want a diseased plant to end up composting any kind of a similar plant out of doors. In order to kill disease, the plant must be exposed to heat and left to decay for several months.

You can use the lint from your dryer in compost. You can use finely shredded newspaper in your material, but make sure to take out the slick color pages. If you have a lot, it's better to take it for recycling.

Fireplace or wood stove ashes can be put in your compost, to a degree. Limit your ash usage to two gallons per 3x3x3 container. Do not use charcoal ashes, as they will not decompose and the sulfur and iron contained in them can damage your plants.

Yard Waste:

If you live in an area with a lot of pine trees, you'll be relieved to know you can shred and use these in your compost! They rot slowly, so do make sure to chop or shred them as finely as you can.

Grass is a great source of nitrogen, so is highly desirable in compost, as long as it does not contain additives or pesticides.

If you want to use mowed grass in your compost, make sure it is not grass that has been sprayed or treated, and that you have spread on your drive way or some other surface to dry for at least one day. It should be sunbaked and have the consistency of straw before it's ready to compost. It should then be mixed with some brown composting material to keep it from clumping and smelling.

If you live near the ocean, you can use seaweed in your compost, and in fact it is known to be one of the best sources of nutrient for your soil. Just make sure you have rinsed the salt off thoroughly first.

If you are using weeds, hay or old garden plants in your compost, you will want to make sure they are dried. Don't use weeds with large root systems or weeds that are going to seed. This may go without saying, but careless composters have been known to inflict their own future gardens with reused weed material.

Vegetarian animal manure is excellent composting material. You will probably want to age the manure and alternate it in a pile with leaves or straw. This is because when manure is fresh it tends to contain too many nutrients and cause the composting pile to become too hot. You do not want the helpful bacteria and earthworms to burn in your compost heap. New manure can even cause the roots of baby plants to die.

Where to Put the Compost Pile?

You will want your pile on top of lawn or soil, so you can take advantage of the worm activity. Put it on even ground where there is plenty of sun for drying it out. You will want it sheltered from wind, and probably your neighbors! There are large black bins available which allow for trapping solar heat and composting through winter months. Three sided shelters often also work well -- you can use concrete blocks or fencing to build.

When to Compost:

Composting schedules often differ due to regional weather conditions. If you suffer cold winters in your area, you are going to want to start your compost in the spring.

Mixing the Compost:

The effectiveness of your compost pile is dependent on air circulation through it, and the temperature of it. It must be aerated. You can mix it with a large garden fork periodically, or you can simply place tree branches or tubes vertically into the pile.

Your compost pile should be between 104 and 131 degrees F. Optimally you should only turn the pile when it is below 104 or over 131 degrees. This will keep the heat uniform and will keep the pile decomposing most efficiently.

The process of composting can take as long as a year or two, so you should be prepared to wait until decomposition is fully finished.

When and How to Use the Compost:

You can tell that your compost is properly decomposed when you can see very few pieces of material. It should have a crumbly consistency and be dark brown in color.

If you are using compost to plant a lawn, you can use up to three inches of compost before you plant it. You can plan on maintaining the lawn with a thin layer of one-quarter to half an inch spread annually.

Your normal time to be using the compost is spring and summer during your ordinary gardening season.

In a garden, compost can be worked into the top six inches of soil before planting, or a layer up to an inch thick can be spread on top of an existing garden. It will continue to decompose into the ground. It can also be used when planting individual plants and around your bushes and trees.

If you make the decision to compost, know that you are employing the most natural method of gardening available, and you are doing a great favor to the earth. Happy composting!

Published by Susan Hamlin

Freelance writer living in Paradise, California. Interested in the arts, conditions of the spine & chronic pain issues. I love to thrift shop, visit art shows & galleries, outdoor music festivals. Play guita...  View profile

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