Year-Round Gardening
Composting Made Easy
Season 2 Episode 13 | 4m 25sVideo has Closed Captions
Quick tips on making compost for your home garden.
Quick tips on making compost for your home garden. We’ll tell you what materials are good for composting and what you should not put in a compost pile.
Year-Round Gardening is a local public television program presented by WPSU
Year-Round Gardening
Composting Made Easy
Season 2 Episode 13 | 4m 25sVideo has Closed Captions
Quick tips on making compost for your home garden. We’ll tell you what materials are good for composting and what you should not put in a compost pile.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipI'm Allison Sanchez, a professor in plant science at Penn State.
And in this episode, we'll talk about composting.
Composting is a great, eco friendly way to reduce food waste and is good for soil, too.
It is also a great way to recycle materials that would otherwise go to landfills.
I'll show you how composting helps improve your soil and what you should include in a compost pile.
Let's get into it.
There are several way that compost improves your soil.
It supports beneficial worms, fungi, bacteria, and other soil microorganisms with nutrients and habitat.
These microorganisms break down compost and other organic residues, releasing nutrients plants can use in addition to supplying nutrients.
Compost also helps improve soil structure in clay soil.
Compost can improve aeration, which can help root growth and improve soil structure allowing excess water to drain.
In sandy soils compost can help retain water, which helps manage moisture around roots.
A compost pile is made up of what we call green and brown materials.
Green materials include fresh leaves, plant material, thatch, grass clippings, rinds from fruits and vegetables, along with other ways like apple cores and tomato cores.
Coffee grounds and tea bags.
Brown materials include dead plant materials and dry leaves.
Clipped brus eggshells, sawdust, wood chips.
Straw.
There are also things you should not include in a compost pile because they can pose a food safety risk.
Alter the composting process or have negative effects on the plants where it's used.
Do not add meat, bones, cheese, salad dressing, oil and other fats, plant materials with disease or insect infestation with human and pet wastes.
Also, chec with your local and county codes for any regulations regarding home composting.
And choosing where to build your compost pile.
Keep in mind these aspects.
It should be easy to turn the pile, so make sure it's accessible.
It's easier to prepare and maintain when it's close to the materials you are composting and water.
It's also nice when the pile is near the location where you plan on using the compost.
Protect the pile from excessive wind.
Also, placing it in an area where it doesn't get too much sun can prevent the pile from drying out and minimize how often you need to add water to it.
Look for a site with partial sand to help heat the pile when possible.
Shred your green and brown materials before adding them to the pile.
This will facilitate the decomposition process.
Build your pile up to at least one cubic yard, for example, three feet wide by three feet tall by three feet long.
Smaller piles are not as effective.
The pile should be moist, but not too moist.
For reference, it should be as moist as a damp rag.
If it's too wet, the decomposition process will be affected.
Turn the pile.
If it is too wet to promot drying water, and mix the pile if it is too dry.
One way to build your compost pile is with these layers.
Start with a six inch layer of brown material, then add a two inch layer of gray material.
Next, add a two inch layer of soil.
This will help prevent odors from forming.
It will take about 3 to 4 months for materials to fully decompose.
During the first 3 to 4 weeks, you should turn the pile frequently to ensure proper aeration and to bring in composted materia from the outside to the center.
This will also avoid unpleasant odors if it's becoming too wet or too dry.
You'll know you can use your compost when it looks dar brown, crumbles when squeezed, and smells like fresh soil.
Year-Round Gardening is a local public television program presented by WPSU