Composting
Composting transforms garden and other vegetable waste in to a dark, rich, productive soil combination that gardeners call Black Gold.
WHAT IS COMPOSTING
Composting is nature’s process of recycling decomposed organic materials into a rich soil known as compost. Anything that was once living will decompose. By composting your organic waste, you are returning nutrients back into the soil in order to save the “MOTHER EARTH’’
Composting is a simple way to add nutrient-rich humus which fuels plant growth and restores vitality to depleted soil. It’s also free, easy to make and good for the environment
BENEFITS
Soil conditioner: With compost, you are creating rich humus for lawn and garden. This adds nutrients to your plants and helps retain moisture in the soil.
Recycles kitchen and yard waste: Composting can divert as much as 30% of household waste away from the garbage can.
Good for the environment: Composting offers a natural alternative to chemical fertilizers.
Compost not only adds nutrients to the soil – it also increases the ground’s ability to hold water.
Finished compost can be classified as a 100% organic fertilizer containing primary nutrients. Compost improves soil porosity, drainage and aeration and moisture holding capacity. Compost can retain up to ten times its weight in water.
In addition, compost helps buffer against extreme chemical imbalances; aids in unlocking soil minerals; promotes the development of healthy root zones; suppresses diseases associated with certain fungi; and helps plants tolerate drought conditions.
THINGS TO COMPOST
fruit and vegetable scraps, eggshells, leaves, garden plants, lawn and garden weeds, straw or hay flowers, cuttings, coffee grounds, tea leaves, newspaper, shredded paper, cardboard.
You can also add garden soil to your compost.
Do not compost meat, bones or fish scraps (they will attract pests), or diseased plants.
Leaves and grass clippings are also excellent for compost, but should be sprinkled into the bin with other materials, or put on in thin layers. Otherwise they will mat together and take longer to compost.
A healthy compost pile should have much more carbon than nitrogen. A simple rule is to use one-third green and two-thirds brown materials. Green stuff (high in nitrogen) to activate the heat process in your compost. Brown stuff (high in carbon) to serve as the "fiber" for your compost.
METHODS OF COMPOSTING
Compost bins make composting easier.
You can start with a small amount of compost and a handful of soil (or compost starter). Then, as you get extra ingredients, just add them to the mix.
The compost will blend together — fresh ingredients will blend with more mature compost that’s at an advanced stage of decomposition
How quickly compost breaks down depends on four thing – moisture, oxygen content, temperature, and a good mix of ingredients.
Nature creates compost all the time without human intervention. But we can step in and speed up the composting process by creating the optimal conditions for decomposition.
Don’t Dispose….. Compost!! Turn kitchen scraps in to super-fertile soil!
REPORT
Recently I brought together few friends and made a power point presentation on Composting. The presentation covered many aspects of composting, there was a special mention about Home Composting and urged all the participants to intiate the efforts of home composting and make a vow to plant atleast a tree in their life time.
Finally to encourage the participants to take the message forward, I distributed saplings to each one of them. I have been doing this exercise regularly as I strongly believe that Home Composting is the “Need of the Hour” to address our environmental concerns.
By Aparajita Ramesh, Grade7,
The Indian High School, Dubai, UAE