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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Sequoia needles as mulch or compost

I live in Portland, OR and I have a 100+ ft sequoia in my back yard. Keeping up with the falling needles/leaves is a year-round project. I've often wondered if they would make good compost. And yesterday there was a sever windstorm has blanketed my…
emersonthis
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Should a compost bin have air gaps or solid walls?

When watching videos about composting there seams to be two kinds. Those that are made from pallets, and therefore have air gaps and those with solid walls. According to this video, the correct way to make smell free compost is by having the correct…
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How can I tell whether compost is too hot to plant into?

I have just had delivered a tonne of bulk compost. My intention was to mulch flowerbeds and also lay out a new no-dig vegetable bed so I ordered what I expected to be mature compost. The compost is what I'd consider extremely hot; I can feel radiant…
Tom W
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Strange things in my purchased manure / algae / compost-mix - unusable?

Three months ago I bought an (20kg pack) organic compost mix of (horse-)manure/algae/compost. In addition it states "naturally moist". I used some part of it and I put it, loosely closed, in a dry but badly temperature-isolated place. We had some…
Patrick B.
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Bokashi with little food waste

I am new to composting and I have so far failed 2 batches of bokashi. I have a 20l bokashi bin which lasted about 3 weeks in my 2 attempts before they started to smell rotten. It usually takes me about 2-3 days to accumulate enough food scraps (in a…
Fried Rice
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Heavy wet clayey soil - grit, sand or perlite?

I live in a rented house with a garden in North East of England. Last year I attempted to create a small bed for growing herbs and some vegetables but the soil appears to be very clayey and wet all the time so my there was no harvest last year to…
David O
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Can the bacteria in compost bin be dangerous for kids?

During the process of composting, is it dangerous for kids to play with? I mean to say is it okay if a child plays close to a compost heap or touches the material with their bare hands? I heard about bacteria living in the compost. From the article…
Xin Lok
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Burying large amounts of burgen

I need to dispose of a very large amount of Burgan (kunzea/tea trees) that I am removing from a part of a rural property it took over and is posing a fire danger. The current pile is about 3x3x10 meters and there is a lot more to come. I am trying…
kofifus
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Can I throw a plant that has white flies into the compost pile?

I have a bunch of dead leaves from a plant that has white flies. Can I use them for compost?
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Is it sensible to do composting in a grow bag or pot which already has plants planted in it?

I've taken a half liter soft drink bottle, cut off the bottom portion of it and created holes at the bottom and created top-vents like the ventilation that pipe composting needs. The blue arrows show the air-vents and the yellow arrows, the plant…
Nav
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How thick of a layer of wood chips will I want to keep the soil warm in a USDA zone 4A environment during the winter?

I'm currently building a 10X100 fungal/garden bed, in a USDA zone 4A environment, and am going to want to keep the soil warm enough to keep fungi spreading. How deep will I want a layer of wood chips to try to keep the area warm enough, but not so…
black thumb
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What are the obstacles to wide-scale commercial composting of human feces?

I hope this isn't too broad. I'm talking about large scale industrial composting. So you take a city's sewage, treat it (irradiating is one method I've seen mentioned) and modify it as needed. Then apply it to crop lands. Even applying it to…
Clay Nichols
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Is this underground compost system likely to work?

I live in an arid area with strong winds and very hot summers. I've tried a regular compost pile but have had problems with pests (migratory rats that seem to be attracted by the smell) and the heat: it dries the pile up faster than we can add new…
Pekka
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I've read that composting can reach up to 140 degrees - does this affect my plants?

I plan to do approximately a 1'x1' curved ditch between my garden rows filled with wood chips, and manure, will this make the plants get too warm, or will it keep the soil cooler like cover crops do??
black thumb
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Walnut leaves in compost - yes or no?

I have several walnut trees in my yard, and this year I am going to make compost for the first time in my life, and would like to know whether I should include walnut leaves in my compost pile. There are contradictory opinions on this matter on the…
VividD
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