Despite the absolutely crazy weather here on Pair o – Dykes ranch this week I managed to get out in the garden a bit. I Loooove my garden. It’s really slow goin’ this year. The nights are still chilly here in the desert, so my little
tomatoes and peppers and squash are growing slowly, but they’re growing! No doubt it’ll get hot – BAM – and then my green babies will shoot up and out and flower all at once! (See the one on the far left? There’s one lil Roma growing there!)
Let’s talk compost, today. You know I loves me some magical transformation of trash into treasure- art, all that’s green is gold in Thorne’s World, ya know. It’s Only the Good Friday, and I can’t help but share a little Green Goodness! Compost. Black gold, (we don’t need no stinkin’ oil!) baybee!
There are about a million different ways to make compost, it seems. if you Google it you may soon be overwhelmed by the variety of opinion and the types of composting set-ups; barrels and bins and cages; above or below ground. To turn or not to turn? To add newspaper? To layer or not to layer? They even have worm bins for your kitchen! (I reeeeally want one! We can’t have worms in the garden here, our soil gets too hot, but I sure could use some of those lil squirmers to help me compost the kitchen waste!)
You might, like me, find yourself lost in a sea of terms; anaerobic, biologic factors, microbial activity…
But it’s really not that difficult.
Left to her own devices Mama Nature will make her own compost anywhere a pile of leaves or bracken rests long enough. I think we tend to make things too difficult sometimes. It’s true that the way you do your compost and the materials you add will affect the temperature and amount of time it takes to degrade and become good for your garden, but when it comes to compost a little common sense goes a long way.
Out here on the ranch, We have a variety of compost areas and methods, but since we have plenty of space and lots of time, I don’t worry too much about my compost. I have BIG piles of weeds and bracken that are patiently awaiting the lawnmower to chop them down to size, but they are composting all on their own while they wait.
I have the heap in the corner of the pumpkin yard of wild mustard, green tumbleweeds, tamarisk rakings and the mess of newspapers and bird seed, food and droppings that I clean from the bottoms of my 6 rescued parrot cages.
Then there is the load of wood chips that is slowly turning to compost, and the horse manure that my partner brings home from the dude ranch where she works as a builder. These large piles will be mixed and mashed and shredded and mown and watered and turned eventually to compost.
Then there’s my two raised beds that I discovered don’t work well in our summer heat: I’ve turned them into my fine compost bins. I don’t dump the big stuff in these, but since my devil grass fiasco a couple of years ago, I’m not putting any horse poop in my beds that I don’t know for sure has composted hot enough to kill any seeds. So these beds are gor devil grass clippings, bird cage waste from now on, sifted wood chips from the front yard pile, and the horse manure the GirlyBoi brings home. All smallish stuuf that should compost fairly quickly- I’ll use it next spring.
I can almost hear you all yelling,
“But we don’t have that much space, (or time, or patience)!”
It’s okay. It’s all good!
The biggest problem most folks seem to have tends to happen when their compost piles get too big to deal with. My advice is to start small and take what you learn with you as you and your composting skill “grows up”! Probably the easiest and most quickly efficient method is what I call my bag method.
I start with a plastic or vinyl feed or potting soil bag, but a heavy duty lawn bag or two works just as well. Start with a few inches of soil in the bag. I generally use the worn out potting soil from when I’m re-potting in the spring and throughout the year.
First I toss in all the brown clippings and trimmings from the potted plants I’m sprucing up. Then the weeds I pull walking back and forth to the mailbox or taking the dogs for a run.
Coffee grounds and kitchen waste (I tend to avoid meat products in all of my compost, although that is another matter for much controversy. I’d just as soon skip the flies, and maggots are just gross) When there’s a sloppy bunch of kitchen scraps- coffee grounds, tea bags, potato or other vegetable peels and fruit trimmings I usually toss in some more soil to keep the smell and flies down. This does sort of follow the “layered” technique, but not because I really work at it, it just seems to happen that way. It usually takes me only a few days to a week at most to fill the bag. I water it a bit and then tie the top up tight and set the bag in the garden in the sun.
As soon as one bag is done, I start another. If you run the kitchen waste through a food processor each bag becomes pretty much fully composted in 2 weeks or so. If you toss larger pieces of kitchen waste in your compost bag give it a month. If there are any large chunks of plant matter that haven’t fully broken down when I open the bags, I sift them into a working bag and let them go another round!
This quick and easy compost method makes great potting soil, compost for flower beds, raised vegetable beds; just about any small gardening area you can think of.
Once you have mastered the compost bag technique, it is pretty simple to move to larger quantities as space permits. Just keep the same balance going that works for the bags.
Here are a few really good information links to get you started!
Veg Web has a super easy to read site with step by step instructions, types of compost bins and loads of info as does Avant Gardening along with videos.
Got a special method that works for you? I’d love to hear your experiences with composting so don’t be shy, leave me a comment! And if you just can’t get enough of gardening today, stop by my list of Green Garden Tips.
But no matter what you do today, find a way to get your good on for Only the Good Friday, and if you want to enjoy a whole lot more good, head over to This Eclectic Life and let Shelly set you good, then hit up the OtGF blogroll and comments, and have a GOOD day!
Peace, out!







4 comments for this post
chilly and damp here for too long. my compost is slow, the veggies growing are slow… i am slow in the head as i do better with some sun too :) i have a bin at the fam’s and a bin at my house. i need to get two more- so i can mix better- put some in from one to the other. i don’t do meat products either. i don’t need any more animals in the yard :)
We’ve composted for years. We just toss the kitchen scraps and the non-weeds from the yard into a small enclosure we built. Toss it from time to time — usually when we need soil. There’s always stuff in there.
No science, not much thought. Just… toss it in and watch what grows, mostly.
Totally awesome good, girl. I have taken your advice on composting in a very small way…but am surprised at how quickly it turns into wonderful good growing medium.
Have a great weekend!
i have been wanting to compost for a long time but have felt a little overwhelmed by all the information and still unsure how to do it. thanks for writing about this.
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