Perfecting the art of composting can be tricky, but it’s essential to the health of your garden. Compost adds beneficial microbes to the soil and provides the highest nutrition for your garden plants.
Composting is an essential part of organic gardening. It’s the ultimate recycling of your grass clippings, food waste, and yard waste. It also adds organic matter to your soil which nourishes the soil food web.
Many years ago, horse manure and straw were the standard ingredients for garden compost and fertilizing farm fields. This combination created outstanding soil but offered some challenges in nutrients, depending on the animal’s feed. It also introduced tons of weed seeds. But it was a perfect balance of “browns” and “greens” for composting: high-carbon “brown” materials (straw) and high-nitrogen “green” materials (manure). Both are required in sufficient quantity to create compost.
Contrary to popular belief, it’s not worms feeding from the bottom of the pile that creates compost – it’s bacteria and fungi. And just like you and me, microorganisms need food to go about their business. In composting, food is plentiful when your browns and greens have the optimal carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of 30:1. This ratio helps to “cook” or heat up the pile quickly with bacterial and fungal activity to speed the decay.
Getting the right combination of greens and browns might be a little tricky at first, but with a little experimentation, you’ll get your compost pile cooking. You’ll know when your greens are too high because the pile will smell like garbage. More likely, you’ll have the opposite problem – your pile will cook too slowly. But that’s okay because the ingredients will break down eventually. There’s even a thing called “cold composting,” where you just throw everything into a pile in an out-of-the-way place and let it do its thing. Underneath the pile the following year, you’ll find rich compost. Nature takes care of itself.
*Table scraps are excellent for composting as they add valuable bacteria to speed the breakdown. Use anything that’s fruit, grain or vegetable, but avoid meat scraps, because the smell may attract animals like raccoons, which will tear your bin to shreds trying to get it. Meat scraps may also turn putrid in your bin and create a horrendous odor.
The easiest way to compost is to place shredded autumn leaves and coffee grounds in a compost bin and stir it once a month. You can also pee on the leaves once in a while (yes, really, because pee is high in nitrogen—just don’t make it your business every day). Let the leaves and coffee grounds sit for a season, and voila: compost.
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If you’re making compost in a container like a trash bin, give it a stir once a week and check the smell (assuming you don’t have a rotating compost bin on a stand). If it has a foul odor, either your browns-to-greens ratio is out of whack, or it’s too wet. Remove the lid and let the pile air out for a day or two. If it’s still smelly, you have too much green stuff (nitrogen). Add more brown material from the list above, stir the new ingredients in, and the smell should go away in a day or two.
When compost is finished, it will look crumbly, be the color of chocolate, and have a pleasant, earthy smell, not foul in any way. The finished pile will also be much smaller than the pile you started with – about two-thirds smaller, depending on your ingredients. Not all of the yard waste may break down into crumbly pieces – it may have been too big or too woody. Use an old window screen to filter these chunks out. Dump your compost on your garden and start again!
Want to know more? See all of our posts on composting.
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