Never miss a recipe!
Enter your email address to subscribe to Harvest to Table free via email:
almanac apples arugula asparagus beans beets bok choy brussels sprouts cabbage Chinese cabbage Chinese leaves cooking corn dates delicious bites dried beans eggplant farmers market fennel fresh this week garlic grapefruit grapes horseradish in the garden kale kitchen garden legumes lemon mandarin orange melons mint mushrooms mustard greens nectarines oranges pears peas potatoes pumpkin radish Southern Hemisphere sun-dried tomato sweet corn tangerine tomato turnip vegetable garden winter squash
Categories
- Around Here
- Berries
- Bulb Vegetables
- Cereals & Grains
- Citrus Fruits
- Container Gardening
- Cooking
- Delicious Bite
- Dried & Candied Fruit, Rhubarb
- Flower Vegetables
- Food For Thought
- Fresh This Week
- Fruit Vegetables
- Fruits
- Herbs, Spices & Condiments
- In The Garden
- Kitchen Garden Almanac
- Leaf Vegetables
- Legumes
- Making A Kitchen Garden
- Melons
- Mushrooms
- Nuts & Seeds
- Pome Fleshy Fruits
- Root Vegetables
- Seed Starting
- Southern Hemisphere
- Stalk Vegetables
- Stone Fleshy Fruits
- Storing Vegetables and Fruits
- Tropical Fruits
- Tuber Vegetables
- Vegetables
Measurement Converter
Hardiness Zone Finder
Find your zone by entering your zip code
Favorite Food and Garden Blogs
American Community Gardening Association
Center for Ecoliteracy
Common Ground Garden Los Angeles
Compost Guide
Culinate
Eat Local Challenge
Eat Well Guide
Edible Communities
The Edible Schoolyard
The Ethicurean
Food Routes
The Garden Lady
Gardeners Anonymous
In My Kitchen Garden
Local Harvest
Locavores
Mighty Foods
Mother Earth's Garden
National Gardening Association
Reading Dirt
Seafood Watch
Seeds of Change
Shirls Gardenwatch
Simply Recipes
Slow Food USA
Sonoma County Master Gardeners
Sustainable Table
This Garden Is Illegal
Thoughts on the Table
Veggie Gardening Tips
What to Eat
- « Making Compost |
- Main
- | Planting Lettuce »
Harvest Wizard
A practical guide to food in the garden and market
How to Compost Faster
Filed under: In The Garden, Tagged as: compost
• Set a foundation of plant debris (leaves, weeds, or grass clippings) 6 to 8 inches deep on the ground or in the bin. Add a 1 to 2 inch layer or soil, fresh cow or horse manure or a few handfuls of blood meal and then lay the first layer of ingredients for composting.
• Mix "brown" ingredients--such as straw and dry leaves--with "green" ingredients--such as grass clipping and kitchen waste.
• Chop or grind large material such as plant stems into small pieces. Mix coarse material with finer material such as grass clippings.
• Keep the compost pile moist, but not wet. Compost should never be wetter than a squeezed-out sponge. Cover the pile with a plastic sheet or tarp during heavy rainfall.
• Turn the pile every 3 to 4 weeks to introduce oxygen into the pile and allow the contents to decompose evenly. (This will also discourage odor and flies.)
• Add a 1 to 2 inch layer of nitrogen rich topsoil (rich in microorganisms and earthworms) or fresh manure or blood meal between each deeper layer of "brown" or "green" ingredients. This will speed decomposition.
• For significant decomposition to occur within the compost pile the heat within the pile must reach 140º to 150ºF. For this to happen, the air temperature surrounding the compost heap must be greater than 50ºF.
For more on composting basics click here.
Never Miss a New Post subscribe to Harvest to Table by entering your email:
Harvest to Table's New Encyclopedia:
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide
A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide is a how-to guide on planting, growing, and preparing more than eighty vegetables and herbs. This handy home companion is perfect for avid cooks, foodies, and both beginning and expert small scale vegetable gardeners.
Send This Entry To A Friend
Link to this page
Bookmark this page using the following link:
http://www.harvestwizard.com/2008/10/how_to_compost_faster.html
Do you have a website?
You can place a link to this page by copying and pasting the code below.
<a href="http://www.harvestwizard.com/2008/10/how_to_compost_faster.html">How to Compost Faster</a>
Never Miss a Garden Tip!
Just enter your email address and you will subscribe to "Harvest To Table" Web site updates via email for free. Make sure you confirm your subscription from the confirmation message you'll receive in your mailbox right away.
Most Popular
Recent Posts
- January Garden in the Northern Hemisphere
- Kitchen Garden Almanac for January
- Seed-Starting Vegetables in January
- Seed-Starting in Three Steps
- Seed Starting Basics
- Dwarf and Miniature Vegetables for Containers
- Vegetable Varieties for Container Growing
- Growing Vegetables and Herbs in Containers
- Cooking Turnips
- Thanks Readers!
Recent Comments
- Stephen Albert on Seed-Starting Vegetables in January
- Patricia on Seed-Starting Vegetables in January
- Patricia on Thanks Readers!
- Anonymous on Planting the Autumn, Winter, and Spring Garden
- Anonymous on Cool-Season and Warm-Season Crops
- Stephen Albert on Blue Hubbard Squash
- Jim on Blue Hubbard Squash
- Stephen Albert on Blue Hubbard Squash
- Jim on Blue Hubbard Squash
- Stephen Albert on Blue Hubbard Squash
- Jim on Blue Hubbard Squash
- Lora on Broccoli
- Nirmal on Nopales
- ethel on Nopales
- Stephen Albert on Nopales
- ethel on Nopales
- Stephen Albert on Nopales
- chigiy on Nopales
- Jill on Costata Romanesca Squash
- Stephen Albert on Tender Summer Squash
- Melody on Tender Summer Squash
- Stephen Albert on Eggplant Growing
- Karen on Eggplant Growing
- Stephen Albert on Eggplant Growing
- Lloyd on Eggplant Growing
Subscribe by RSS

