Print
Category: Homepage

Everything in the natural world breaks down into compost sooner or later - leaf litter in the forest, or a rotting tree on the ground. Compost is the natural cycle of birth, death, and rebirth. This is what you want to imitate for the best garden possible.

You can use compost as a soil amendment, mulch, and worm habitat. If you are striving for a healthy, productive organic garden, start composting!

The Basics of Composting | Nature's Path

Composting Styles

How to Make Compost

Compost is a balance between nitrogen and carbon. Fresh, green materials such as kitchen scraps and grass clippings provide nitrogen. Twigs, paper, and dead leaves are brown materials that provide carbon. Use them in a ratio of approximately 2:1, carbon to nitrogen. If there is too much nitrogen, your compost pile will start to smell like your garbage can on a hot summer day. Add more carbon and turn it in with a spade to balance out the ratio again. Never add dairy, meat, or feces of domestic pets!

Shop organic food - free shipping

Water and aeration are other key components of a good compost pile. Keeping the pile moist will allow the microorganisms to stay active, breaking down the brown and green ingredients. Be careful, though - too much water will also make your compost smell particularly unpleasant. Dry out a wet pile by turning it and aerating it. This also adds oxygen, which facilitates the composting process, and mixes the nitrogen with the carbon for a more thorough breakdown.

There is some debate on the necessary heat for a compost pile. Decomposition causes the heat that burns up weed seeds and speeds up the process. A temperature of about 140º will accomplish that. A hotter pile will also kill off the beneficial organisms doing the work. If your pile gets too hot, aerate it by turning it.

The Basics of Composting | Nature's Path

All That Said ...

The Basics of Composting | Nature's Path