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Home composting
is an effective way to reduce household waste
naturally.
Organic Waste
Material, like yard and kitchen waste can be
recycled through 'Composting". Finished compost
is a wonderful soil amendment that can be
applied to soil around the home or garden to
improve the texture of the soil and add
important mirconutrients. For Vermicomposting
(or Worm Composting), Click
Here.
Composting is part of any complete household
environmental strategy. You benefit the earth in
more ways than one – not only are you not
contributing to landfills, you’re returning the
goodness of nature, back to nature!
Compost holds nutrients from decaying material in a
form that is
easily absorbed by plants. Leaves, grass clippings
and food wastes
are suitable for composting. Compost is especially
beneficial when
combined with manure. Check out the
Advantages
& Benefits and
Methods
of Composting.
For 10 Reasons
Why You should Compost
Click Here.
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What is
composting?
You know how wonderful a forest smells?
That aroma of dense, healthy, thriving plants? That’s
naturally occurring compost.
Some people incorrectly believe compost to be a smelly,
unpleasant pile in the backyard. Compost is actually organic
matter that is no longer recognizable – what you are left
with after decomposition is rich, dark, great-smelling,
crumbly and soil-like.
You can start a compost pile with leaves and debris from
your yard. Kitchen scraps make great compost. You shouldn’t
use meat, bones or fatty foods for compost because it will
attract animals. Organic fertilizers, like compost and
manure, are great for conditioning your soil.

Click
to learn about
Composting Methods!
How
it works...
What’s the science of it all? How does a load of garbage
transform into a marvelous fertilizer? Easy.
Under correct conditions, almost no work is required of you.
Nature will reduce garbage into compost (that’s garbage, by
the way – organic matter – not trash).

Bacteria are vital agents in decomposition, and it’s
bacteria that cause compost to get hot (in fact, in cooler
months, you may even notice steam). That’s because the
bacteria are on a feeding frenzy, and the faster they eat,
the more heat they generate. Hot compost is a very good sign
that great things are happening in there.
But when your pile cools off, you must turn it so the middle
of the pile has all the right elements (air, moisture,
carbon and nitrogen) to rekindle activity and keep the pile
hot.
That same heat will escape if the pile is not large enough
to retain it. A pile of at least one cubic yard (3 x 3 x 3
feet) is a good rule of thumb.
Click here for Complete Guide to
Composting.
To start your own home
composting system,
click here.
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