Composting Facts

Here are some Composting Facts to help you decide which is the best way to reuse your garden waste

Composting facts to show you how to recycle the waste from your yard.

Composting Facts

Composting Facts

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When yard waste is composted, it breaks down aerobically – that is, making use of oxygen. Unlike landfills, which disintegrate waste anaerobically (without oxygen), garden composting produces few greenhouse gases. And when you reuse your yard waste, you are providing yourself with beneficial, natural compost, hence doing away with the requirement for artificial fertilizers.

If you are interested in organic food see my recommendation for…
>> Organic vegetable gardening <<

Below, are some ideas and composting facts for how you can reuse your yard waste:

green check smallGrass trimmings can be left on your grass after cutting. They will serve as mulch, helping to preserve the beneficial moisture. As the lawn cuttings rot, they will improve the earth of your lawn. Decomposing lawn cuttings include nitrogen, which is an important fertilizer for your yard and lawn.

- Composting Facts -

Composting Facts

green check smallYou can likewise rake up your turf trimmings and load them up into a compost pile where they will rot. You can include bits of this decaying matter to your garden compost, and even sow seeds into the grass clipping stack. Squash and pumpkins are possibilities for plants that will grow this way, as long as the compost pile gets enough sunlight.

green check smallClippings and trimmings from brush, trees, garden plants, etc. can be put into your compost heap. If they are big or woody pieces, you will need to slice them up a bit before including them to the pile. If you have a flower yard, compost the pinched-off blooms and cut stems. If you have a veggie garden, compost peelings, rinds, and leaf and stem clippings.

green check smallFallen leaves can be stacked onto your garden compost, or composted alone to make something called leaf mold. This is a kind of garden compost that is high in nutrients. You can use it for mulch or fertilizer, depending on what your method of rotting it down is. Just chopping or shredding leaves produces mulch that you can utilize immediately, and it will improve the dirt as it decomposes.

green check smallTo make leaf mold, you must let the leaves rot much longer, from 6 months to 1 year. If you do not slice and shred the leaves initially, making leaf mold could take up to two years. Just compost the leaves in a pile, compost bin, or other container that enables adequate air flow and turning.

green check smallBiodegradable bags can be used for yard and garden waste if you have trimmings from weeds or other products you do not wish to reuse. Some neighborhoods will collect garden waste and return it as mulch or fertilizer.

green check smallCreative uses for branches and twigs consist of home-made herb-drying racks, natural fences, or crafts. Use natural twine to tie the branches together and strengthen with nails if needed.

Compost Pile

Compost Pile

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If you are interested in organic food see my recommendation for…
>> Organic vegetable gardening <<

I hope you have found this article – Composting Facts – informative, and you will share your own experiences below in the comment box and please take the time to click on the share button, many thanks; see more articles on The Daily Green Post home page.

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Daily Green Post

How green is your garden? How well do you understand the nature of composting?

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