How to Make and Use Compost: The Ultimate Guide - Softcover

Nicky Scott

 
9781900322591: How to Make and Use Compost: The Ultimate Guide

Synopsis

How to Make & Use Compost features an A-Z guide, which includes a comprehensive list of what you can and can t compost, concepts and techniques, compost systems, and common problems and solutions. It includes how to: - Easy to use A-Z format. - Compost your food waste safely. - Get the best out of a Dalek-type plastic composter. - Make your own seed, plant and cuttings compost. - Create liquid feed for your plants with a wormery. - Make compost in your flat or on your balcony. - Learn about school and community composting. By making your own compost you can feed your plants, increase the fertility of your soil, and help reduce the amount of waste going to landfill at the same time.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Author

Nicky Scott is the Co-ordinator of the Devon Community Composting Network and has written the best-selling pocket guide, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.

From the Back Cover

Composting is easy, fun, saves you money and helps you to grow lovely plants. Whether you live in a flat with a balcony or have a family and garden that generates large amounts of food and green waste, this book shows you how to compost everything that can be composted - at home, work or school, and in spaces big or small. It covers:
- creating the right mix for successful garden compost;
- how to compost your food waste safely;
- the full range of composting systems, from plastic 'daleks' to large-scale units, including prices and suppliers;
- composting with a wormery;
- making liquid feeds and your own seed and potting compost;
- composting in schools, with advice on getting a school scheme started.
How to Make and Use Compost features a comprehensive A-Z guide, which includes what you can and can't compost, concepts and techniques, and common problems and solutions.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

How to Make and Use Compost

The Ultimate Guide

By Nicky Scott

Green Books Ltd

Copyright © 2010 Nicky Scott
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-900322-59-1

Contents

Introduction,
PART ONE,
1 Why make compost?,
2 How does it work?,
3 Making successful compost,
4 Choosing the right composting system,
5 Composting with worms,
6 Using your compost,
7 Community composting,
PART TWO,
8 A–Z Guide,
PART THREE,
9 Composting food waste on a large scale,
10 Composting in schools,
Resources,
Index,


CHAPTER 1

WHY MAKE COMPOST?

"Why would you want to deny the Earth your cauliflower stalk?" – Satish Kumar


At the end of a meal, many leftovers go straight into the bin along with any peelings, etc. from preparing the food. We currently throw away a third of the food we buy, but the tide is turning and more and more people want to grow their own food in healthy soil, and reduce their waste, which is why making compost is so important.

Whatever type of soil you have, compost will improve it. I've heard people talk about how compost is only a 'soil conditioner', as though somehow this was not really important. I think they mean that compost does not add much in the way of nutrients to the soil, but this is not the point. Soil conditioning really means adding humus to the soil. Humus is stable organic matter in the soil and it acts like 'glue', holding on to nutrients and water. In effect humus adds life back to the soil: doing this is the most important thing that we can do for the soil and it's ridiculously easy.

Compost has some nutrient value too, mostly held by the microbes that have proliferated during the composting process. The following are just some of the benefits of adding compost to your soil.


Healthy soil


Compost adds life in the form of microorganisms

Using compost on your soil will dramatically increase the amount of life in that soil – both life that is visible to the naked eye and, more importantly, life that can be seen only through a microscope. The addition of compost builds a healthy soil and so boosts the microbial activity, which provides food for hundreds of thousands of different species of fungi, bacteria and other organisms; these microorganisms are also food for a whole range of other organisms, which in turn are fed off by predators. What we can see when we look at compost are the creatures, mini-beasts on the macro scale; you will need a magnifying glass to see the very small ones, but many are obvious and well known to us. See 'More wildlife', page 18, for more on this.


Crucially, this microscopic world is cycling nutrients from the compost materials into a form that the plants in our gardens can easily assimilate, and holding them in the soil until the plants need them. Of all the soil organisms the worm is the one that we all recognise as invaluable for creating a healthy soil, and it does indeed possess almost miraculous powers – both the compost-dwelling species and the larger soil dwellers – but in fact it is the whole complex web of life in the soil that is kept vibrant by regular additions of compost.


Compost changes the physical structure of the soil

The humus that remains when compost has been further broken down in the soil coats the soil particles and creates the crumb structure that allows the exchange of gases and liquids. So in sandy soils compost increases not only the water-holding capacity but also the nutrient-holding capacity of the soil. In

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