Questions tagged [compost]

Compost is organic material which has undergone decomposition by microorganisms and is used as a soil amendment.

Composting is normally thought of putting a pile of organic matter in a pile to allow it to break down with either bacteria, or fungi often taking a year or more, but sometimes taking as few as 3 weeks.

Bacterial dominated composting: the most common method of composting performed by adding bacteria to rotting organic matter

Fungal composting: the second most common method for composting adding different types of fungi to a compost pile in order for it to break down while feeding your other plants in the garden with Endomycorrhizal fungi, and Ectomycorrhizal fungi when adding it to the soil in a symbiotic relationship. In order to keep a healthy ammount of these two types of fungi you need to ensure the fungi has enough soil to eat and add more as needed.

Insect composting: to have food is done by taking your compost, and dumping it somewhere random in your field for the insects to go after as they prefer decaying material.

The composting process can be accelerated by monitoring and managing the feedstock, the size and temperature of the pile, air and water infiltration into the pile, and various other factors. The temperature of the pile is primarily driven by the carbon to nitrogen ratio of the constituents. Other methods include sheet and trench composting.

Finished compost is useful as a fertilizer, soil amendment, and for erosion control. You can add finishing compost directly to the soil any time along the way.

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Is just adding a new soil layer on top of existing soil good for creating a new plant bed?

I want to create a small area (2 square meters) for new plants and/or seedlings. I need to raise a level in that area a little (for overall garden design purposes), and I plan just to put 30cm / 1ft high layer of mixture of soil and compost to that…
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Another dying Meyer lemon tree

I have two potted Meyer lemon trees, both about 20 years old, in 14" pots. I live in Rhode Island, so the trees are outside from May to October, then in a west facing, roughly 70 degree kitchen, with large windows and skylights, for the winter. I…
Susanna
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Are rat droppings safe to compost?

We have indoor rats as pets, and are interested in using the used bedding as compost (as there's a reasonable amount of it). The bedding itself reckons it makes good compost, but we're unsure about the droppings / urine. They're fed on pre-mixed…
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building an aerated static composting system?

I've been doing a little research into hot composting. From what i understand you need a carbon to Nitrogen ratio of 30:1 and you need to rotate the pile when the center gets to around 150 degrees. From what i understand, the rotation had mostly to…
user379468
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How can I easily and cheaply turn dead tree waste into usable garden products?

We have a bunch of dead tree waste, both from a dead tree as well as trees dropping branches. I think they are mostly box-elder tree parts. Is there anything we can do in order to turn this into useful garden material? Either fertilizer or somehow…
enderland
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How can I break up drywall without damaging my soil?

I have heavy clay soil. I just discovered that drywall is compostable, and possibly good for certain types of soil (like heavy clay). I can break it into sufficiently small pieces with a hammer, but doing so directly on top of the soil actually…
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Suggestion for cheap and efficient way to shred compost ingredient?

Everyone who has done composting would probably agree small particle size of compost ingredients is essential for quicker composting. Is there any way to shred compost ingredients without using machine (shredder/lawn mower)?
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What to do when compost doesn't finish before it gets cold?

I'm new to composting and I'm noticing my compost still has eggshells and and a little bit of uncomposted, compostable bag material floating around. I have this 35 gallon composting unit: I had been putting a small bag of compost in every week but…
Enigma
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Managing Temperatures in my compost bin

I have a 3ft x 3ft compost bin and have been putting garden and vegetable waste into the compost on a regular basis. I have also been turning the pile every week. I have started to measure the temperature of the pile but wanted to find out what is…
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What useful things can I use shredded branches for?

I will be carrying out some heavy pruning of some over grown trees (mixture of deciduous, fruit and a few conifers) over the next few months. I am already planning to save some of the thicker, straighter sections for woodwork, sculpture and log…
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Uses for grapevine branches?

It is the time of year when I start to cut back my rampant grape vines. I usually tie them together and leave them for the birds to nest, but this year I am creating a hugelkultur bed and I was wondering if these long vines would be good for…
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Composting: what is the ideal proportion of 'green' to 'brown' material?

Everyone seems to have an opinion on this, but is there any definitive answer, ideally backed up by link/s to reputable sources or research? Ratio by weight or by volume.
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Composting: what is the ratio of volume of material in to compost out?

Say you've got a compost heap, 1 full metre cube, with about 1 part green to 3 parts brown by volume. If this is left to break down, what volume of compost will be produced?
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How do I turn a plastic stock tank into a vermicomposter?

We have a Rubbermaid, plastic stock-tank. It has an unfixable crack in it and we've been saving it incase we could find a future use for it. I've just started getting into composting and I plan to do that, but I thought this might make a good…
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Could a compost bin with only green materials explode?

I have a compost pile but it's not in my home, and I need to store the kitchen scraps temporarily somewhere. I use a small plastic bin for that purpose. I don't have any brown materials, only nitrogen-rich materials. When I open the bin, it has a…
user11323
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