Organic Composting
Organic Gardening is the way Nature intended its vegetables, herbs and fruits to be grown.
Composting,
often described as natures way of recycling, is the
biological process of breaking up of the organic
waste such as food waste, manure, leaves, grass
trimmings, paper, worms, and coffee grounds, etc.,
into an extremely useful humus-like substance by
various micro-organisms including bacteria, fungi
and actinomycetes in the presence of oxygen.
Composting is most often a natural process that
continuously occurs in nature, often without any
assistance from mankind.
Both living plants and annual plants that die at
the end of the season are consumed by animals of all
sizes, from larger mammals, birds, and rodents to
worms, insects, and microscopic organisms. The
result of this natural cycle is compost, a
combination of digested and undigested food that is
left on the forest floor to create rich, usually
soft, sweet-smelling soil.
Composting Types
»
Aerobic Composting
- This means to compost with air. High nitrogen
waste (like grass clippings or other green material)
will grow bacteria that will create high
temperatures (up to 160 degrees). Organic waste will
break down quickly and is not prone to smell. This
type of
composting is high maintenance, since it will need
to be turned every couple days to keep air in the
system and your temperatures up. It is also likely
to require accurate moisture monitoring. This type
of compost is good for large volumes of compost.
» Anaerobic Composting
- This is composting without
air. Anaerobic composting is low maintenance since
you simply throw it in a pile and wait a couple
years. If you just stack your debris in a pile it
will generally compact to the point where there is
no available air for beneficial organisms to live.
Instead you will get a very slow working bacteria
growing that does not require air. Your compost may
take years to break down (this is what happens when
you throw your food waste in the garbage that goes
to the landfill). Anaerobic composts create the
awful smell most people associate with composting.
The bacteria break down the organic materials into
harmful compounds like ammonia and methane.
» Vermicomposting
- This is most
beneficial for composting food waste. Along with red
worms, this includes composting with bacteria,
fungi, insects, and other bugs. Some of these guests
break down the organic materials for the others to
eat. Red worms eat the bacteria, fungi, and the food
waste, and then deposit their castings. Oxygen and
moisture are required to keep this compost healthy.
This is medium maintenance compost since you need to
feed your red worms and monitor the conditions.
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