Composting is recycling your kitchen waste and lawn trimmings and turning them into a valuable resource for your garden or houseplants. This is done by speeding up the process that composting will naturally do by itself in a period of time, decomposition.
Many folks will often think that compost is dirt. It is a common misconception that the end result of composting is the dirt that you find in the ground. This will be a material that will become natural fertilizer, suppling the dirt nutrients, to make your garden, plants, and flowers strive.
Prior to learning how to compost you will see that there are decisions to be made, what kind of bin will you need to get started, what is the kind of material that will be thrown into the compost bin, and choosing a good spot for the container. No matter how you decide to do it, how waste is made into compost will be the same no matter what. 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 them to do a good job you will need to supply them with the right amount of water and air. If you have been putting off getting a compost bin or making a pile because you think it will smell, foul smell will only happen if the waste is not getting enough air. 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. However if you do encounter the problem that the bin or pile is producing a bad odor, you can fix this by turning the material with a pitchfork as well as adding more material that will help circulate more air. Dry leaves can be good material to add.
Composting is good for the environment and your garden, it will reduce allot of waste going to landfills and provide under nourished soil with lots of nutrients so your plants can flourish.
If you are a do-it-yourself builder see this website for a list of free blueprints, you can find information on how to build a shed in addition to blueprints for compost bins.
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Jul 30th, 2010Powered by Yahoo! Answers