Garden Tips- Making Compost
Binghamton Agway Farm & Home Store
145 Broad Avenue Binghamton, NY 13904
(607) 723-7409
bafeedback@binghamtonagway.com
Store Hours
Mon - Fri 8am - 8pm
Sat 8am - 6pm
Sun 8am - 5pm
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MAKING COMPOST
BLACK GOLD FOR GARDENS
Environmental experts
estimates that kitchen and yard waste comprise 25% of
the refuse in landfills. These materials can be easily
and effectively recycled into rich humus that will
improve any garden’s soil texture and add important
nutrients for vigorous plant growth. It also makes
attractive, beneficial mulch.
What is Compost?
Compost is simply organic material that has been broken
down by bacteria, fungi and earthworms. Such
decomposition has gone on in nature since the beginning
of life. The home compost pile is a simple way to
accelerate this process.
Composting Structures
Compost can be made in something as simple as a plastic
garbage bag or a five-gallon pail. Larger amounts of
materials are easily managed in drums, barrels or bins.
Structures can be made from plastic, wire, wood or
masonry blocks. Your Agway store has several types of
bins that can simplify the job. Try to locate the
recycling area where it is in shade near the garden hose
on well-drained soil and out of sight. A garden corner
is often ideal and very convenient for using the
finished compost.
What Materials Compost
Well?
Any organic material can be composted, but some
materials are more desirable than others. Yard wastes
such as grass clippings, leaves, twigs and frost-damaged
plants decompose well, ad do kitchen wastes such as
vegetable peelings, fruit scraps, coffee grounds and egg
shells. Avoid composting meat, bones and dairy products,
as they may attract rodents and other animals. Ideally,
you should use three times as much high-carbon material
(twigs, branches, sawdust, pine needles, straw and
leaves) as high nitrogen material (fruit and vegetable
peelings, coffee grounds, grass clippings and manure).
In general, materials that have been shredded or cut
into small pieces will decompose faster.
Maintain the Right
Conditions
Although composting is more of an art than an exact
science, there are a few basic rules. First, it is
important to remember that decomposition depends upon
continuous microbial activity. (Bacteria, fungi and
other microorganisms use the organic materials as energy
sources.) Oxygen, moisture, temperature and the types of
material affect the rate of decomposition. Start by
layering compost materials six to eight inches deep and
moisten with water to the consistency of a squeezed-out
sponge. Add more materials in layers. Turn the compost
pile weekly to create more available oxygen. Some
decomposition occurs under anaerobic (without oxygen)
conditions, but the process is slow and produces foul
odors. Maintain the moisture level of a squeezed-out
sponge. Too much water pushes oxygen from the air spaces
and creates anaerobic conditions. Water the layers of
materials as you add to them and water the pile during
dry periods. Temperature, both inside and outside the
compost pile affects decomposition. Inside temperatures
between 90 degrees and 140 degrees help destroy
undesirable weed seeds and diseases. Outside
temperatures of 50 degrees or higher are recommended.
Follow these guidelines and in six to twelve months you
will have rich organic material for improving your
garden’s soil and mulching plants. If you have any
questions or need any composting supplies, the
knowledgeable folks at your local Agway store are always
ready to help.
TROUBLESHOOTING
|
Symptom |
Problem |
Solution |
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Bad Odor |
Not enough air |
Turn the pile daily until odor is gone |
|
Center of pile is dry |
Not enough water |
Moisten materials while turning pile |
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Compost is damp and warm |
Pile is too small |
Collect more material and mix pile in the
middle but nowhere else |
|
Pile won’t heat up |
Lack of Nitrogen |
Mix in nitrogen source such as grass
clippings, fresh manure or fertilizer.
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