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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



Making Compost For Your Garden

You spent plenty of time organizing, arranging, and planning your garden, and now it's time to make compost in order to add natural nutrients to your garden soil. There are plenty of benefits by using compost instead of regular fertilizers for your garden. Not only are you recycling, but you're using naturally organic material in order to fertilize your garden instead of chemicals that can actually harm the water table..

  

It's easy to compost, and you can do it in a variety of different sizes. If you're looking to compost a small amount for a small garden, try a 5 gallon bucket. And there are plenty of a different types of compost bins available for sale. Check the Internet or your local garden supply store and find a compost bin that will work for your property size, compost size, and garden size.

Composting is decomposing of organic materials. You'll be able to take a variety of different materials and put them in your compost pile, whether it's leaves, plant tops, weeds, grass clippings, old hay, or even some different types of soils. You can also add kitchen scraps, fruit and vegetables, and a variety of other organic materials to the compost pile to add nutrients.

You might want to start with a base of your home garden soil, and then add a variety of grass clippings or other organic material, and then add a bit of soil on the top. Make sure that your compost pile stays moist, you can actually hot compost and have fresh loam for your garden within a month. The hot process takes a bit more management than just allowing your compost to rot naturally, but it's quite effective in order to get fertilizer and more nutrients to your garden in a hurry.

Composting is a great way to recycle a variety of natural products and use it in a new form. Whether you're looking to allow your compost pile to decompose naturally, usually about two years, or whether you're going to actively manage your compost pile, you're bound to benefit from composting and recycling organic materials.

It's easy to compost and allow the decomposing process to happen naturally. Find a hidden corner on your property, and just start storing your leaves, grass clippings, and weeds in this area. About once a month go out and stir it up a bit, add a bit of moisture, and allow the decomposing process to happen naturally. Or, hot compost and you'll have a variety of different nutrients to offer your plants and gardens quickly and easily.

Whether you hot compost, cool compost, or just use a small bucket to compost a little bit, composting is a great way to get natural nutrients for all of your house plants, garden plants, and vegetables.


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Worms Composting Bin News

Worm whisperer and worms aid Club in fight against childhood obesity - Augusta Free Press


Worm whisperer and worms aid Club in fight against childhood obesity
Augusta Free Press
“The worms,” Caulkins says, “were more a way to get the kids interested and learning something about composting than for use at the garden site.” Future plans are that Project Grows will help provide a learning experience for area youth about where ...

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Recycling can be your garden's best friend - Isle of Wight County Press


Isle of Wight County Press

Recycling can be your garden's best friend
Isle of Wight County Press
Rodents will seek it out, even chewing through plastic compost bins to get a meal — indeed, even though I avoid giving them a meat diet, they have still bitten into mine in a quest for fermenting fruit and peelings. Then there is the grease, ...

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Alys Fowler: bokashi bin compost - The Guardian


The Guardian

Alys Fowler: bokashi bin compost
The Guardian
If your garden is squeezed (or doesn't have soil), composting can be tricky. So what's the solution? You employ some friendly bacteria and a few other choice workers, namely worms, to help you out. The bokashi bin is a Japanese system that pickles your ...

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ALASKA BOTANICAL GARDEN WINTER WORKSHOPS - GardenNews.biz (press release)


ALASKA BOTANICAL GARDEN WINTER WORKSHOPS
GardenNews.biz (press release)
Worm Composting Saturday, February 18 - Learn everything you need to know in order to start a worm composting system in your home or improve your existing bin. House Plant How-To Saturday, February 25 - Join ABG Staff and Bell's Steph Daniels to learn ...

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Worms' black gold a boon for former fisherman - TheChronicleHerald.ca


TheChronicleHerald.ca

Worms' black gold a boon for former fisherman
TheChronicleHerald.ca
With a front-end loader, they bring in rich compost topsoil. LeBlanc tries to keep the dirt at 18 C. He applies worm food that he mixes himself. "We kind of purchased the recipe," he said of the special worm diet. Nothing in the worm chow is ...

and more »

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