Discover What Composting is All About
You can put all sorts of items into your compost such as waste from your kitchen and also hedge trimmings thus turning these waste products into something alltogether more useful for the garden. What happens is that the process of composting is basically speeding up the natural process of decomposition. If you like gardening then composting is somthing that you should understand.
Don’t confuse compost with soil. It is a common misconception that the end-result of composting is the dirt that you find in the ground. If you want lush and healthy plants then giving them compost will really help because you are also giving them the nutrients they need.
Before you begin composting there are choices to be made – what type of container and style suits your project, what you will be putting into your compost bin, and the location of your bin. But regardless of these decisions, the process of composting happens in the same manner. It is a breakdown of waste materials as they are digested by microbes (bacteria and fungi).
The microbes are the workers of the composting equation. In order for the microbes to do the job needed, they require certain things such as food, air and water all in the correct amounts. For great compost you should consider using a wormery.
It might be that if you are not familiar with owning a compost that you think that composts are all smelly horrible things it is most likely the result of not enough air circulating throughout the waste material. Without air, the material will still breakdown but it will be done by anaerobic microbes (organisms that do not need oxygen) as opposed to aerobic (ones that need oxygen). If you discover that your compost is emmitting a foul smell then you should add in some cardboads and also turn the compost with a fork to allow more air into it. Wood chips or hay are good for the compost.
Composting is good for the environment and your garden – it eliminates the amount of waste you throw away and enriches the soil your plants grow in.
Tagged with: bacteria • composting • decomposition • earth • fungi • garden • gardening • making compost • nutrients • plants • Soil • waste
Filed under: backyard garden • backyard gardening • gardening tips • indoor herb garden • new brunswick • vegetable garden
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The biggest mistake when owning a wormery is that often the worms are overfed.
This then results in food that putrifys and smells awful, as the post above states – a good bit of shredded cardboard, and a turn over with a garden fork often rectifies the situation