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Organic Compost
Organic compost is the ultimate garden fertilizer. It contains all the
nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium that your garden
needs; moreover these nutrients are released slowly in the soil over
a period of time. Organic compost is cost-free and a superior option
to commercial fertilizers; it is also easily made from household and
garden waste. Using compost improves soil structure, water retention,
and aeration; it adds to soil fertility and a healthier plant root development.
Overall, organic compost keeps the soil in a perpetual balanced state.
What to compost:
Almost anything can be used in the compost pile all year round. The list
is long: tea leaves, coffee grounds, kitchen refuse, grass clippings,
garden waste. The compost pile should have an equal measure of carbon-rich
materials or browns and nitrogen-rich materials or greens. Brown materials
constitute dry leaves, straw and wood chips, whereas greens are kitchen
plus household waste and grass clippings. The ideal ratio is 25 parts
brown to 1 part green. Too much carbon will cause the pile to decompose
slowly, while too much nitrogen will give off an odor. However, composting
is more an art than an exact science; it is left to individual choice
and learnt only by the trial and error method. The rule of thumb is that
everything will decompose quickly if it is shredded or chopped or crushed.
How to make organic compost :
Making compost is child's play. It can either be passive or a highly
managed activity. You can either make a simple compost heap and add organic
material and let it rot at its own pace and thus indulge in passive composting.
This may yield finished compost in a year or more. Or you may use an
interventional strategy where you actively participate and manage the
pile, turning it often to get organic compost in as little time as 3-4
weeks. What you have to constantly monitor in both passive and active
organic composting is the temperature of the compost pile. This is easily
done by feeling the pile; if it is hot, the decomposition process is
active. If cool, you have to speed up microbial activity by adding more
nitrogenous material.
Organic composting is gaining ground as environmental concerns mount.
Recycling household and garden refuse to arrive at an environmentally
sound option like organic compost, a complete food for the garden, is
a creative way of dealing with the problem of waste disposal and landfill
overuse in cities and towns worldwide.
Making a Compost Bin
Compost is organic waste from your garden and household that is transformed into a nutrient-rich fertilizer by the action of innumerable microbes. Since this starting organic material is messy, it is advisable to contain it in a holding unit. A...
Composting Pet Manure
The question most often encountered is whether pet manure is safe to handle and whether potential pathogens are eliminated when it is composted. There are few studies on cat feces but dog manure has been successfully used for composting. Dogs...
Compost Toilets
Compost Toilets, also known as biological toilets, waterless toilets and dry toilets contain and control the composting of excrement, toilet paper, carbon additives and sometimes food wastes. Compost toilets work on the same principles as compost...
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