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Maintaining a Compost Heap

from:
By Deb St. George, on Composting in your Gardening Guide From Spiritravels.com





Many people who maintain gardens have a large amount of organic waste, from grass clippings to leaves and dead plants. Unfortunately, many waste money and time having these wastes transported to a landfill. It isn’t just a waste of good compost; it’s a waste of everything that goes into the process of transporting it (the garbage man’s time, the money you pay for the removal, etc). It is truly a travesty.

All this garbage that people are trying to get rid of can be a better supplement for your garden than any fertilizer or chemical. If you properly facilitate the decomposition of all of the garbage, it will alter chemically until it is in such a state that it can be nothing but beneficial nutrition for other plants. Therefore you can turn all the stuff you would have thrown away into top grade fertilizer for your garden.

Usually compost is maintained in a pile somewhere in your backyard. Usually the thought of a compost heap brings disturbing images to ones mind; heaps of rotten garbage emitting a horrid odor. However, if you maintain it correctly you’ll be able to produce great compost without producing an offensive odor. When I first began my compost pile in an effort to improve environmental health, I made several major errors. These included preventing the pile from the oxygen it truly needed, and keeping it to dry. It ended up decomposing in a very non-beneficial way, and producing an odor so foul that I had government agents knocking at my door.

When you are choosing your spot where you will be putting all of these materials, you should aim for a higher square footage. Having a really deep pile of compost is not a good idea, because generally the deeper sections won’t be exposed to anything that is required for the process to work. It is better to spread it all out over a large area. If you have a shed or a tool shack of some sort, it is a possibility to spread it over the roof (with boards to keep it from falling off, of course). I have seen this done several times, and it helps keep the pile out of the way while still maintaining a large square footage.

A compost heap can consist of any organic garbage from your yard, garden or kitchen. This includes leaves, grass, any leftover food that won’t be eaten, or newspaper (no more than a fifth of your pile should consist of newspaper, due to it having a harder time composting with the rest of the materials). Usually if you have a barrel devoted to storing all of these things, it will fill up within several weeks. It is quite easy to obtain compost, but the hard part truly comes in getting it to compost.

After you have begun to get a large assortment of materials in your compost heap, you should moisten the whole pile. This encourages the process of composting. Also chop every element of the pile into the smallest pieces possible. As the materials start to compress and meld together as they decompose, frequently head outside and aerate the pile. You can use a shovel to mix it all up, or an aeration tool to poke dozens of tiny holes into it. Doing this will increase the oxygen flow to each part of the pile, and oxygen is required for any decomposition to take place.

If maintaining a compost pile sounds like something that would interest you, start considering the different placement options. The hardest part about maintaining a pile is choosing a spot that provides enough square footage without intruding on the rest of your yard or garden. While usually you can prevent the horrible odors that most people associate with compost heaps, it’s still not a pleasant thing to have to look at whenever you go for a walk in your garden.

 

About Gardening News

Children are natural gardeners - Providence Eyewitness News


Children are natural gardeners
Providence Eyewitness News
The Children's Workshop has some fresh ways to get kids excited about gardening in your own backyard. Children love the outdoors especially playing with dirt. When adults give children the opportunity to work and play in a garden, it teaches your child ...

and more »

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Lowell students learn about gardening and nutrition - Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier


Lowell students learn about gardening and nutrition
Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier
Escobar, who has helped his family plant yellow tomatoes at home, is also learning about gardening and nutrition at school thanks to a $1 million US Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Service People's Garden School Pilot Program grant.

Read more...


Unique Club at Dixon High Gives Students Opportunity to Hone Gardening Skills - Patch.com


Unique Club at Dixon High Gives Students Opportunity to Hone Gardening Skills
Patch.com
It's called the Garden Club and it's designed for students to learn about where food comes from and gives them an opportunity to learn about gardening techniques. With the help of donations from Ace Hardware, Recology/Jepson Prairie Organics and Slow ...

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From the Belle Tower | There's mulch to learn about gardening - MyrtleBeachOnline.com


From the Belle Tower | There's mulch to learn about gardening
MyrtleBeachOnline.com
By Celia Rivenbark - From the Belle Tower For 22 years, Duh and I have lived in the same house. The house is about 90 years old and so is the grass and stuff around it. You could ask why we would feel the need to interfere with 90 years of successful ...

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Chelsea Flower Show designers weather 'nightmare' - BBC News


BBC News

Chelsea Flower Show designers weather 'nightmare'
BBC News
From hose pipe bans to flooding to plunging temperatures, gardeners have described a "nightmare" situation with some having to substitute the plants in their creations to suit the climate. Jo Thompson, garden designer for A Celebration of Caravanning ...
Chelsea Flower Show 2012: Sarah Price's gardenTelegraph.co.uk
Fit for the Queen: Young Mirror reader puts finishing touches on Chelsea ...Mirror.co.uk
Chelsea braced for Gavin's gardenIrish Times
The Independent -Scout London -IFA Magazine
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Great garden flowers: A gaillardia with plenty of moxie - Christian Science Monitor


Christian Science Monitor

Great garden flowers: A gaillardia with plenty of moxie
Christian Science Monitor
Here's a new cultivar, Commotion Moxie, that has much to offer flower gardeners. By Judy Lowe / May 21, 2012 This perky little perennial, known as Gaillardia Moxie Commotion, loves the sun and blooms a long time. Some readers will think it's silly for ...

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Chelsea Flower Show: this year's trends - Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

Chelsea Flower Show: this year's trends
Telegraph.co.uk
Are the extremes of Chelsea utterly divorced from the actual gardening lives of the thousands who visit the show and the millions more who watch on television? Well, yes and no. The planting schemes at Chelsea this year will undoubtedly have an effect ...

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