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Books
The Complete Compost Gardening Guide: Banner batches, grow heaps, comforter compost, and other amazing techniques for saving time and money, and ... most flavorful, nutritous vegetables ever.
The Complete Compost Gardening Guide: Banner batches, grow heaps, comforter compost, and other amazing techniques for saving time and money, and ... most flavorful, nutritous vegetables ever.
by Barbara Pleasant Deborah L. Martin
Our Price: $13.57
Used from: $8.94

Let it Rot!: The Gardener's Guide to Composting (Third Edition) (Storey's Down-to-Earth Guides)
Let it Rot!: The Gardener's Guide to Composting (Third Edition) (Storey's Down-to-Earth Guides)
by Stu Campbell
Our Price: $10.15
Used from: $4.68

How to Make and Use Compost: The Ultimate Guide
How to Make and Use Compost: The Ultimate Guide
by Nicky Scott
Our Price: $13.21
Used from: $10.20

Compost Stew
Compost Stew
by Mary McKenna Siddals
Our Price: $10.87
Used from: $9.10

The Rodale Book of Composting: Easy Methods for Every Gardener
The Rodale Book of Composting: Easy Methods for Every Gardener

Our Price: $11.53
Used from: $2.96



It's Easy to Make Vermicompost To Compost

  

You'll simply need a container that worms cannot decompose or dig through. This means plastic, metal, or even wood. Also, you'll have to be able to make sure it drains easily; you don't want your worms to drown. Phil the bottom of your bin with a bunch of newspaper, then add kitchen scraps, plant matter, and other organic material on top, and then add a layer of soil. Your worms will then need to be kept at a constant temperature and avoid extreme temperatures, and in a few months, all of this newspaper, food waste and plant matter will be compost it into great garden soil.

You need to make sure you feed your worms on a regular basis, and yet don't overfeed them. If you overfeed with food waste and vegetable peelings, there's a chance you're going to have a funny odor coming from your compost or worm bin. They can only eat so much at once, and rotting material can smell.

One of the nice things you can do with worms is have them move themselves from one type of compost pile to a new compost pile. You'll just add your fresh food or bedding on a different side of your worm bin, and they'll migrate to the new bedding and food supply area. If you need to move your compost and want to leave your worms in the same place, just put your bin in bright sunlight. The worms will move to the bottom of the bedding, and you can move your compost to your garden.

Having a few worms in a small compost bin is a great way to make a rich loam for your garden or house plants. You'll simply need a good environment for the worms to breed and eat in, water it once in awhile, and add fresh food. It doesn't take long for worms to decompose material into nutrient rich soil.

Using worms or a compost pile instead of regular fertilizers not only saves you money from buying fertilizer or other chemicals, but also allows you to recycle plant matter, kitchen scraps, and even newspaper into a nutrient rich matter for your garden soil.

Remember, you don't have to have a large compost pile; you can do it in something as small as a 5 gallon bucket. Enjoy composting, recycling, and using worms to make a nutrient rich soil for your garden through composting practices and rape all of the benefits of natural fertilizer.


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Starting A Compost Pile Headlines

John-Paul Maxfield aims to put nutrients from food waste back into the soil

Waste Farmers collects organic waste and creates organic agricultural products like fertilizer, potting soil, biochar, and compost tea.

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Margaret Lauterbach: Clippings fuel fertile ‘hugel’ mounds

By the middle of this month, we should be past the probability of extremely cold weather, so it should be safe to perform dormant pruning. Pruning before severe freezes occur may result in tissue damage that could kill your tree, shrub or plant.

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BLOG-Waste not. Want not. Worry not.

Is there a better expression of frugality than a good compost heap?

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Chattanoogan.com - Chattanooga's source for breaking local news

On his parents’ farm on Signal Mountain, Ryan Walden does something no other farmers in this area do - grow mushrooms. He has a specialty called the “Blue Oyster Mushroom” and he grows “Shitake” as well.

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Free mulch available at Zilker Park

AUSTIN -- Free mulch from recycled Christmas trees is available at Zilker Park. The Austin Parks and Recreation Department and Austin Resource Recovery Department say the mulch is available on a first-come, first-served basis starting Tuesday at 2 p.m. You can pick up mulch in the polo field of Zilker Park until it is all gone. Officials say the mulch is for private use only. You should bring ...

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