Q. Dear Mike: We have been trying to compost for years and haven't been
very successful at it. Our first pile was an open wire bin we threw
garden waste into—and when it was cold outside hid our kitchen waste in
the middle so the neighbors wouldn't howl. After 10 years, we still
didn't have any compost in the bottom. Now we have a tumbler I toss
kitchen waste, yard waste and garden excess into. We’ve been using
compost activators but the result after about 15 weeks is black,
clumpy, moist stuff. What are we doing wrong? Should we add more
leaves? Spin the tumbler more often?
---Jim & Betty in Mahomet, IL
Mike: I listen to you Saturday afternoons here on our local NPR
station. I really enjoy your program and the obvious care you put into
it. You and “Wait, Wait…” are the best radio of the week! Now, could
you please refer me to a good source of composing information? I don't
do as much as I could; partly because our property has lots of shade
trees and partly because I don't know as much as I should. Keep up the
good work,
---James
in Northern Michigan
Q. Jim and Betty—yours sounds like the most basic mistake in
composting; way too much ‘green material’ and not nearly enough brown.
A lot of people are sold on composting as something that will recycle
their kitchen garbage alone into garden gold; but that’s just not the
case. Fall leaves are the backbone of a composting system.
Shred up any amount of fall leaves alone, put them in a container or
just pile them up, and they will pretty quickly become compost. Mix in
small amounts of “wet greens”—kitchen garbage, pulled weeds, frosted
tamata plants and similar stuff—and you will also get good compost,
maybe even of a slightly better quality.
If the green material is well shredded and in the right
proportion—about one part green for every four parts shredded leaf or
other ‘dry brown’ (carbon-rich) material, the resulting compost will
definitely be of better quality and even cook up a little faster than
the ‘leaf me alone’ variety. Make it a ‘hot’ source of nitrogen, like
coffee grounds or barnyard manure, and it will cook up faster and be of
very high finished quality.
But alas, as many composters have sadly learned, piling up your kitchen
garbage simply creates a pile of…well, kitchen garbage. Like we warn
every Fall, you can compost leaves all by themselves and get good
compost. You cannot compost green waste all by its lonesome and get
good compost. (I was going to say that you can turn your kitchen waste
alone into fabulous plant food via “vermiculture”—using a worm
bin to make it happen—but in truth, those bins also require the use of
a carbon-rich material in the form of bedding.)
To avoid another very common error, compost should always be made
‘batch style’. That means thoroughly mixing up your four parts shredded
leaves and one part green waste in a pile, bin,
stationary unit or tumbler and then leaving it alone until its
done.
Because the raw ingredients shrink down during the process, compost
rookies are always tempted to keep adding material to their piles.
Don’t do this! If you keep adding green waste, it upsets the balance
and stops the process cold. This is especially true with tumblers,
which are often referred to as ‘batch’ composters, because they really
need to be filled, turned till they’re done, emptied, and then
re-filled with a fresh load of raw ingredients. If you don’t want to
store your garbage in a trashcan till that time arrives, you’ll need
two or three composters. That way, your vegetative excess can always go
into the one most recently emptied. Line them up in a row—it looks
really cool!
And sorry, but those compost starters and activators
can’t force a bad load to do what it otherwise wouldn’t—and a
well-balanced load doesn’t need them. At least it doesn’t need them at
the beginning. Research has found these products to often be very
helpful at the end. That’s right—although few say so on the label, the
best time for these condensed creams of lil’ organisms to be let loose
in your compost is AFTER the process is over; to give more life to
loads that may have set cold for a spell, or whose organisms may have
died off in large numbers during an otherwise especially excellent
‘cooking’ process.
Speaking of cold, only experienced composters can keep compost cooking
over the winter in the North. I can teach you some tricks to get around
this, but recommend patience instead—especially for newbies. That
hibernating compost will start cooking again—very quickly in fact—when
the weather warms up. (Unless it’s all garbage, of course—then it’ll
stay asleep.)
And “Michigan Jim”: You got trees, fella—that’s not a bad thing! It
means you got lots of leaves with which to make lots of compost! And
you will soon have that (somewhat) ultimate composting reference you
crave to consult—I just finished a big book on composting that’s
scheduled to be published by Sterling this fall. So hang in there, true
believers—Captain Compost is on the way!
Oh, and those of you who didn’t hoard leaves last fall but still want
to make some compost this season can substitute shredded flakes of
straw (sounds like a high-fiber breakfast cereal) or the browned-out
remains of last year’s plants, like the above-ground growth of
herbaceous perennials and ornamental grasses. Leftover Halloween and
Thanksgiving cornstalks are also great; just be sure and shred them up
well.
Helpful
Products From Gardens Alive!
Create your own garden gold with these items!
Compost
Digester
Makes composting easy!
With just this compact bin and your own yard wastes, you can produce a
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Gardener's Gold™ Compost Tea Kit
Boost the health of your plants and soil
Gardener's Gold Compost Tea is brimming with chelated micronutrients
that your plants and the helpful microorganisms in your soil can easily
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Redworms
These worms won’t help your garden directly, but put them in your compost bin and you’ll see the results! They make their weight in castings everyday!