Compost Pile Valuable
Is plant debris trash or treasure?
It can be treasure if you don't dispose of it, but rather convert it to
compost! Leaf mold has a miraculous ability to hold moisture. To compare,
subsoil holds a mere 20 percent of its weight in water and good topsoil
will hold 60 percent. Leaf mold can retain 300 to 500 percent of its weight
in water. Leaves and plant material can be used to improve growing conditions.
Composting is the "natural" way of doing things. Nature has been
successfully composting for millions of years.
Compost is a mixture of decomposing and rotting debris which can be used
to add fertilizing elements to the soil. Composting is a process which returns
plant and animal matter to the soil and completes the natural life cycle.
This cycle began when you planted the seed. As the small plant of the seed
grew, it took nutrients from the soil to make cells and metabolites. As
the plant grew larger, more minerals were required and accumulated. When
the plant dies, it decomposes and the "borrowed elements" are
returned to the soil, thus completing the cycle.
The advantage of using organically-released fertilizer elements is mainly
one of economics. They are free! Gardeners should realize that organically-released
fertilizer elements do not differ in any form or fashion from fertilizer
elements obtained from other sources. Organic combinations of elements must
be reduced to some soluble, inorganic form before being absorbed by plants
again. These inorganic forms are also found in commercial fertilizers. However,
the main advantage of fertilization with decomposed organic materials, other
than the economical advantage, is that when organic matter is added to the
soil, it improves soil tilth and moisture retention. These factors encourage
optimum plant growth and maximum yields when proper culture practices are
followed.
Basic items which can be used for composting are:
- Grass clippings - Grass clippings are relatively high in nitrogen
and make good compost. Mix green, fresh grass clippings with soil or dry
plant material, such as leaves. Be sure that large sprigs which could root
and propagate are eliminated. A thick layer of fresh clippings usually compacts
when it settles, preventing air from entering the pile and slowing or stopping
the composting process. To avoid this problem, add thin (no more than 3
inches deep) layers of green grass clippings and allow them to dry. Another
solution is to add denser organic materials with grass clippings to prevent
compaction.
- Dry leaves - These are plentiful in fall and winter. Most leaves
compost faster and more thoroughly if they are shredded before being added
to the pile. If you don't have a shredder, pile the leaves in a row in your
yard and cut them up with a rotary lawnmower. Rake the chopped leaves and
add them to the compost pile. Shredding greatly increases the total surface
area of any material. The conversion of raw organic material into colloidal
humus is accomplished by a series of fermentations. These fermentations
consume plant residues like a living fire. The finer the particles, the
faster they will be consumed. The faster a compost is made, the better it
is because there is less time for the dissipation of valuable gases and
the leaching out of essential elements.
- Kitchen scraps - Fruit and vegetable trimmings and leftovers
are good items for the compost pile. However, don't use animal products,
such as grease, fat and meat trimmings, since they break down very slowly,
attract rodents and other pests, and have an unpleasant odor. No one appreciates
a rat sanctuary or buzzard roost in a neighbor's compost area! Offensive
odors will also develop if the compost piles become soggy or anaerobic (lacking
sufficient oxygen).
- Other materials - These include sod removed from the lawn, hay,
shredded newspaper and hedge clippings. Don't use large twigs because they
break down slowly. Bone meal is a good addition to the compost pile because
it is high in nitrogen.
Most people have problems with compost piles when they make them with a
single ingredient. If only one ingredient is used, sometimes no decomposition
will occur, regardless of additives and techniques used. It is essential
to add some nitrogen-rich material, such as fresh or dried manure or commercial
fertilizer, because the nitrogen in these materials is needed nutrition
for the decomposing bacteria.
If a compost pile is properly made and maintained, an excellent composted
material should be ready for use in 90 to 120 days. The compost pile can
be free-standing or in an enclosure of some type. The most practical is
close-mesh wire ( to 1/4 inches between strands), 3 to 4 feet wide, 9 feet
or longer, joined together to form a circle. A 9-foot length will make about
a 3-foot circle. The larger the circle or compost pile, the better it can
retain heat and moisture. Do not place this circular wire enclosure where
water from the roof can drip into it. To build the compost pile, start adding
organic materials as they become available, in no special order. Use all
organic waste from the yard. Adding up to 25 percent of horse or cow manure
or up to 10 percent of chicken manure makes a good, rich compost. Too much
manure, however, may cause compost to have an offensive odor if it's not
aerated enough or if the composting material gets too wet. Green grass clippings
have ample nitrogen if manure isn't readily available.
After the first pile is ready, use some of it to inoculate the next. The
pile should be kept slightly moist, like a squeezed-out sponge. Too much
water smothers the micro organisms. The compost pile must be aerated. If
the compost pile is made of material which does not compact, the pile will
have to be aerated only once a month. A tight, heavier pile will require
more aeration, but no more often than every third day. The pile can be turned
with a garden fork or shovel, but the easiest way is with a compost turning
probe. This probe is a tool about the size and shape of a walking cane.
It has two wings that fold into a streamlined point when pushed into the
pile, but spread open when pulled up. On the up stroke, the pile is torn
open, and some of the bottom is brought toward the top. This doesn't require
a lot of strength and it's a quick, easy way to aerate a home garden compost
pile.
Another easy way to turn the pile is to unpin the wire cage, take the wire
from around the pile and pin it back together, now empty, right next to
the original compost pile. Then put the compost material back into the wire
frame. For proper aeration and composting action, each pile should be turned
at least once like this to ensure that the organic material on the outside
ends up in the middle of the pile so it can go through the intensity of
the heating process. If you have a large garden and enjoy making compost,
a number of these wire circle cages can be used. You can keep building them
until the first pile is ready, then you empty it and start over. The compost
is ready to use when the materials have turned brown. Most of them have
lost their identity and the composted material has an earthy smell. Some
people think the finished product of their composting should be crumbly
like old leaf mold. However, for gardening purposes, it is not necessary
to allow the material to completely decompose since final decay can take
place in the soil. When compost is added yearly, the soil will become fluffy,
easy to work, fertile and will hold soil moisture better.
If your soil is lacking in certain elements, the best way to add them is
through the compost pile. Add colloidal phosphate (organics) or superphosphate
for phosphorus and wood ashes for potash. Composted organic materials can
also be used as a cheap iron chelate (a slow-release source of iron) to
remedy the adversities of iron chlorosis, i.e., yellowing plants. Gardeners
can make a "synthetic chelate" in their compost pile by mixing
1 cup of iron sulfate (copperas) for each bushel of moist compost. Particles
of iron will adhere to the surface of the compost material and will be released
for plant use as the material decomposes while it is being used as a mulch
around plants or when incorporated into the soil.
Unwanted insects, such as pill bugs and ants, will get in the compost pile.
Turning the pile often and keeping the moisture just right so that the temperature
reaches up to 140°F to 160°F will discourage them. Making compost
is as much an art as it is a science. The best way to learn to make good
compost is by doing it and not giving up. Most home garden compost failures
are caused by simply keeping it too wet. In a rainy season, you may need
to cover the top with plastic, but not for too long. Heap up the center
of the pile so it sheds water like a thatch roof. It is absolutely essential
that the compost pile be well ventilated so that there is a sufficient flow
of gases between the atmosphere and the interior of the compost pile. The
soil organisms which break down plant residues and convert them into compost
are aerobes, i.e., they must have oxygen to live. If these organisms suffocate
and die because of lack of oxygen, the composting process will stop.
The whole point of composting is to produce a beneficial soil additive.
Moreover, humus is recognized as an excellent soil conditioner. Besides
increasing the soil's water-holding capacity, improving its tilth and aeration,
compost also makes the plant nutrients that are already in the soil more
available to plants.¶