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Compost piles have a reputation
in some quarters for being smelly and attracting flies. That's only
because many well-meaning people have built them without understanding how
to do it right. And doing it right is no harder, only
different!
If you want
to avoid a smelly pile that draws flies, and your neighbors disapproving
glare, don't ever add meat scraps or dairy products to it. Also,
never throw the already decomposing leftovers from Saturdays frig
clean-out on top of your pile, bury the leftovers in
the center of the pile. Get rid of the meat scraps and dairy leftovers
some other way (the neighbors dog?). An alternative for kitchen scraps is
a WORM BIN on the back porch. Worms make undemanding "pets" who will live
on what you throw away and in return, create some rich compost!
The trick with compost is to have
a good balance of wet "green" material and dry "brown" material to keep it
fluffy enough to allow air through the pile. It is important to keep it
from being soggy and matted down. Keep a bale of straw or a pile of last
fall's leaves next to the bin so you have some brown fluffy stuff
to toss on top of each layer of wet greens you put in. Keep the pile
slightly moist all the time. Running a hose on it now and then during
dry weather works, then throw a plastic tarp on it during the wet part of
the year.
The thing is, even if you don't
do it any special way and simply toss it all in an unlovely heap in the
back corner of the yard (but do bury the kitchen scraps
within the pile or put them in a worm bin) after a year or two,
most of it will be compost anyway! With a little attention it works much
faster. Once you see how great compost is and the many ways you can use
it, you'll wish you had truckloads of it,and may even start combing the
neighborhood for more materials to add to it! A word of caution here:
if your neighbor uses chemicals in the form of "weed and feed" or
pesticides on his lawn or herbicides on his weeds, they can transfer to
your soil and plants. So you might ask first
Compost made from a variety
of materials is highly nutritious. When applied regularly to soil,
you may need no additional fertilizer, and it can be used for seed
sowing, potting mixes, lawn top-dressing, and plant mulch.

Compost Guidelines
Use old compost or healthy
soil as a "starter". The micro-organisms in these will get the
decomposition process going. Mix "browns" and "greens" together when your
bin is full, for a faster, more consistant compost. After this mix,
little or no turning is needed. Simply maintain a slightly moist
pile and you'll get great compost with no additional work.
Grass clippings are better
left on the lawn where they will act as fertilizer. If they are too
long to do this without matting, allow them to dry out a bit in the sun.
Then compost them or use them as a thin mulch around veggies.
Shredded or chopped
materials decompose faster. Try running a mower over your pile of
weeds or leaves, a shredder/grinder is even better!
Things to use: Vegetable
and fruit waste, hay, sod, weeds and leaves.
Things to keep out: Meat
and dairy products, noxious weeds; such as bindweed, poison oak and ivy,
and quackgrass; pet waste. Avoid diseased plants as it takes a very hot
pile to kill the disease pathogens.
Finished compost will smell
like rich earth and be fluffy and crumbly.
Some composting ideas;
Any unfinished compost
remaining in the spring can be spread thickly - 6 inches or more - in an
area you wish to improve, and then planted with potatoes, pumpkins or
winter squash. By harvest time you will have a bed of fine finished
compost and a much improved soil underneath..
Ready-made bins
are available, but they can be easily made from such things as stacked
concrete blocks, picket, wire or snow fencing, or 36 inch "hardware cloth"
formed into a large ring. (Any structure that will retain composting
material and allow some air circulation.)
Bag
Composting is easy, too.
Plant wastes and bagged chicken manure or organic fertilizers are mixed
well together in a large plastic yard bag, moistened lightly, tied up and
set aside for 2-3 months.
Another excellent method of
composting is a WORM BIN. A simple tidy bin can be made from a
large covered plastic storage box with small holes poked in the top and
upper sides. It should be 18"-24"deep and 24"x 24" or 24"x 36" for
larger families. Fill it nearly to the top with shredded newspaper (black
and white only), computer paper or cardboard, then moisten well (not
wet) and put one pound of Red Wigglers or Red Manure worms on top.
Keep a small bucket under the sink for kitchen scraps and every few days
dig a new hole in the worm bedding and bury the buckets contents. Keep
the bin in a handy place that won't freeze in winter or bake in summer.
Renew two thirds of the bedding every 2-3 months and toss the finished
compost on your garden or tuck around your houseplants. For more
detailed instructions read "Worms Eat My Garbage" by Mary Appelhof.
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