Black Gold! (Composting 101)
Composting 101
by Lori Seaborg
Would you like to have “Black Gold” for
your garden? Black Gold is basically
just free “dirt” that is full of minerals and of a perfect texture for your
plants. It is also known as compost.
Compost is easy to make, inexpensive, and odorless despite its ingredients.
How
Does Compost Work?
Composting works by little microorganisms eating away at plant or food
material until it breaks down into a soil-like substance. IÂ’m sure youÂ’ve
noticed the dark black soil that you have seen under a deep pile of leaves in
the forest. That is compost.
What Materials Are
Needed to Make Compost?
All plant matter will eventually become
compost, but since you donÂ’t want to wait a decade, you need any combination of
the following, preferably a balance of "brown" and "green":
Brown Material (provides carbon): newspaper (
black and white pages only), brown leaves, pine straw/needles, other brown
plant material
Green Material (provides nitrogen): green leaf
clippings, grass clippings, other green plant material
Other Material (provides various nutrients):
banana peels, fruit/veggie peels, coffee grounds, tea bags, eggshells, other
garbage, hair clippings, manure from chickens, cows, horses
Do not include: Meat products, dairy products, urine/feces
from
humans or your dog and cat, or weed seeds
Keep in mind that you will not have
compost until the microorganisms have broken the plant and food matter into
tiny bits. To help speed the composting process, break all matter into
small pieces if possible.
Where
Should I Put the Compost Pile?
You can make your compost area as complicated or as simple as you prefer. Online
you may find many products to buy, ranging from drums to fancy containers for
your compost. We have always gone with
the free and easy method. We have had a
loose compost pile, a compost pile surrounded on three sides by recycled wooden
pallets, and presently we use the chicken coop as our “compost pile.” We just toss all compost matter into the
coop, even if we know chickens wonÂ’t eat it (such as pine straw). They are wonderful compost turners and give
us rich Black Gold much quicker than if we do it ourselves.
If you do choose to enclose your compost area,
remember that the two necessary ingredients to compost are air and water,
so leave your pile open at the top and with slits on the sides.
No compost pile should be more than 4'
high by 4' wide, for turning purposes.
How Do I Make Compost?
Begin your pile by spreading out a layer
of green material, then brown material. Next, add some dirt to get soil
microorganisms near your pile (they will find it anyway, but this speeds up the
process). Keep repeating the layers. The more balanced your pile is between
brown and green, the less likely that it will smell. If it does smell, make
sure you have not added anything from the "Do NOT include" list
above, and make sure you are keeping the pile balanced between brown and green
materials.
Each time you add a layer to your compost pile, sprinkle water on the pile
unless it is forecasted to rain. Your pile should be always moist like a
sponge; neither very wet nor dry. Sunlight and/or heat will cause the compost
process to move along more quickly.
You need to “turn,” or stir, the compost
pile since the microorganisms work from the inside to the outside. The more
often you stir the pile (I use a pitchfork or let our chickens do the
stirring), the more quickly your pile will be ready.
How
Long Until I Have Finished Compost?
When it is summer in Florida, in the full sun, and if I am keeping the pile
moist and turning it daily, I have compost ready in only about two weeks.
Most often, a compost pile is ready in 2-3 months. Some gardeners start a
pile in the fall and allow it to sit, unstirred, all winter. It is
usually ready by spring.
There are a couple of things you can do to
speed up the process: keep the pile
moist at all times, keep the pile in a warm location (sunny), and turn the pile
frequently.
Your finished compost will look like the prettiest black dirt you've ever
seen, and your plants will love it!
Leave a Comment
Untitled Comment
GREAT post Lori--Thanks for sharing!!
This is easier than I thought--never really looked into it because I just always 'assumed' that the wildlife (bears, deer, coyotes) would get into it....and that's trouble.
This sounds almost too simple....! Simple is good :)
Thanks again!
Lisa
Untitled Comment
07:36, Wednesday, February 22, 2006
.. Posted by crewchief
oh thank you! I've been wanting to start a "real" compost pile. Right now I have a very very small "starter pile", just to see if I can do it. LOL We just picked up some old wood pallets yesterday, so my "real" compost is about to take shape. This is very timely for me. Thanks again!
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