Home Do you compost? Use these tips to get the most out of yours
News

Do you compost? Use these tips to get the most out of yours

Contributors

virginia cooperative extensionComposting is a great way to use up household food waste as well as boost garden productivity. Unfortunately, many gardeners make composting mistakes that can lead to problems like compost that fails to decompose or attracts rodents.

Greg Evanylo, Virginia Cooperative Extension specialist and professor in the School of Plant and Environmental Sciences, recommends that home gardeners implement these compost best practices:

  • Make sure the compost pile is big. If space is an issue, decrease the pile surface area by creating a compost bin. The bigger your pile, the more heat it will generate. The average pile size should be a minimum of one cubic yard.
  • Make sure to turn your pile to get oxygen into it. Without enough oxygen, the microbes will starve, and the pile will go anaerobic. This isn’t good. Turning also ensures that all the waste is being broken down evenly.
  • Make sure to monitor your moisture levels. To do this, perform a squeeze test. Scoop a handful of your compost and squeeze. Does it leak any water? If so, the compost is too wet. When squeezed and no water comes out, but it sticks together, the moisture level is perfect.

“What gardeners are ultimately trying to achieve with composting is the development of a soil amendment that will improve the properties of their soil for gardening,” Evanylo said.

According to Evanylo, compost is useful for improving soil health, boosting beneficial microbial populations, recycling nutrients, and increasing organic matter in the soil.

Composting is also good for the environment. Organic wastes in landfills get converted to methane, a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change. When food scraps are recycled into a compost pile, waste is kept out of a landfill.

Compost dos and don’ts

DO

  • Have a 2:1 brown to green ratio. For example, two parts dry leaves (brown) to one part food waste (green).
  • Have an average particle size distribution- some large pieces, some small, but mostly in the middle.
  • Monitor your moisture levels! Water the compost as needed, but not too often or too much — do a squeeze test to check.
  • Bury food waste and keep covered with browns to help avoid insect and rodent problems.

DON’T

  • Compost treated wood or chemicals (paint, pressure treatment, etc.).
  • Inoculate your compost! Microbes exist naturally.
  • Compost meats, dairy, or pet waste.
  • Compost any diseased plants if the pile is less than 130-150 degrees.

Story by Devon Johnson

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

Politics, U.S. & World

TV: AFP editor Chris Graham talks U.S. Senate passage of ICE funding bill on Fox5 DC

uva basketball ryan odom huddle
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Has Ryan Odom built himself a Top 10 team for next season?

This time last year, UVA Basketball coach Ryan Odom was introducing a bunch of strangers to each other, and trying to convince them, and everybody else, that they could get Virginia Basketball back to where it had been not that long ago. Heading into his second summer as the head coach, Odom is building on...

louise lucas abigail spanberger
Politics, Virginia

Louise Lucas to the ‘Data Center Diva’: No more tax breaks for data centers

Gov. Abigail Spanberger and House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott want the state and localities to continue to be able to offer massive tax breaks to data center developers.

melanie lucero congress
Politics, Virginia

Another contentious Republican primary in the Fifth District in the offing

us politics congress
Politics, U.S. & World

U.S. Senate votes to advance $70B immigration enforcement funding bill

baltimore orioles
Baseball

Baltimore Orioles quietly playing themselves back into playoff contention

joanna hardin uva softball
Etc.

UVA Softball: Coach Joanna Hardin signs three-year contract extension