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With the weather heating up and the importance of keeping everything well watered, it's a good time to focus on our soils - especially with the spring planting season just around the corner. A good soil is critical for water retention and overall plant health.
It is a great time to think about composting. A great old saying is "Waste Not, Want Not." This principle can certainly be put to use in our gardens! We are throwing away in the trash the very material that we can utilize to improve our gardens. Healthy soil is full of all kinds of beneficial microbes and bacterias that will help our plants grow.
Homemade compost is easy and fun! It can be anything from throwing an apple core in the flower bed to utilizing one of the new tumbler type bins with thermometers, etc... Just mowing the lawn and leaving the clippings will help; there's nitrogen in that green stuff!
When we compost we are really just putting back into the earth what we've taken out of it! A few guidelines:
- Do add - any raw vegetable material such as potato peelings, eggshell, yard trimmings, grass clippings, leaves etc. (Avoid perennial weeds and diseased or insect-infested foliage.)
- Do not use cooked foods, fats or meats - you want to attract microbes, not furry visitors! Also, the addition of chemical fertilizers in the compost pile is not microbe friendly.
- Add a layer of garden soil after each addition. The more textures of material the better. The microbes need moisture and air circulation. Hint: If you see ants, the compost is too dry, and an odor would mean it's probably too wet and there's not enough air circulation.
- You don't have to turn the pile, but the more you do the faster it will work. That's why the tumbler bins are popular. Seems we're always trying to rush nature!
If you lack space for a compost pile or large bin, you might want to try some slower but less intrusive composting methods like trench composting or hole composting ('compostholing').
For trenches — dig trenches deep enough to accommodate the volume of waste to be composted. Fill with material. Next planting season, set up new beds atop the old trenches and dig new trenches where the old beds were. By alternating trenches and garden rows each season, you'll improve the soil throughout your garden. The hole composting method is similar, but uses a hole instead of a trench.
The next time you put out newspapers and cans to recycle, think about what we can recycle in our gardens as well.
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