Return to Cauldron Home Page

Menu

Home
Site Info & Rules
Site Archives
Volunteers Needed
Advertise Here

Pagan Supplies
Buy Pagan Books
Buy Pagan Supplies

Community Areas
Community Home
Message Board
   2006 Archive
   2005 Archive
CauldronMUX
Member Weblogs
Sister Forums:
   Asatru Lore

Article Library
New Articles
Religion & Occult:
   Asatru
   Divination
   Editorials
   Hellenic
   Herbs
   Magick
   Meditation
   Metaphysics
   Miscellaneous
   Neo-Wicca
   Occult
   Wicca
Other Articles:
   Crafts & Hobbies
   Gardening
   Home & Family
   Webcrafting

Books & Media
Books Home
Games Home
Music: Free | Pagan
Online Books
Pagan Book Browser
Reviews:
   Academic Books
   Divination Decks
   Fiction Books
   Pagan Books
   Speculative Books
   DVD & Videotape
Submit Review

Pagan Features
Auctions
Chat Log Index
File Library
Humor
Lessons
Pagan Holidays
Pagan Primer
Pagan Rituals
Pagan Supplies
Pagan Youth
Polls
Reconstructionism
Spell Grimoire [Blog]
Web Resources

Pagan Living
Cauldron Cookbook
Take Political Action

Newsletter
Back Issues
Subscribe

Other Features
eCauldronMail
Greeting Cards
Syndicated Articles
World News/Opinion

Shopping
Amazon.com [UK]
Cheap Web Hosting
Doxy's Bazaar
Zazzle

Old Indexes
Article Index
Webcrafting Index

Network Sites
Cauldron and Candle
Cauldron's Grimoire
RetroRoleplaying
RetroRoleplaying: The Blog
Software Gadgets
The Terran Empire

Site Search
Google
Entire Web
The Cauldron

Have Extra Cash?
Support this Site
Donate Via Amazon
Donate Via PayPal

Info on Donations

Buying books & other products via our links to Amazon.com or via the links to other fine stores in our Shopping Mall helps support this site.

Member - Pagan Forum Alliance
Charter Member

Get Firefox! While this web site is designed to work in all major browsers, we recommend Firefox.

Site hosted by

Why TC Uses Dreamhost

Site copyright
© 1998-2008
by Randall

Home > Pagan Living > Gardening > The Art of Composting Search

The Art of Composting
by Carlo Morelli

 

Even a composting neophyte can create top-notch compost. Akin to cooking, composting is half art, and half science. Awareness of these basic factors will help you getting started. Just like a chef demands high quality ingredients, successful composting needs the best ingredients too. Good materials for composting include these: grass clippings, leaves, plant stalks, hedge trimmings, old potting soil, twigs, vegetable scraps, coffee filters, and tea bags. Bad composting materials include: diseased plants, weeds with seed heads, invasive weeds, pet feces, dead animals, bread and grains, meat or fish parts, dairy products, grease, cooking oil, or oily foods.

To prepare compost, you need organic materials, microorganisms, air, water, and a small quantity of nitrogen. Organic material is what you are trying to decompose (see above for Do's and Don'ts). Microorganisms are tiny forms of plant and animal life, which break down organic material. A small amount of garden soil or manure supplies adequate microorganisms. The air, nitrogen, and water offer an encouraging environment for the microorganisms to produce your compost. You can add enough nitrogen to the compost with small amount of nitrogen fertilizer., which can be purchased at hardware stores or nurseries. Air is the one ingredient which you can't have too much of. Too much nitrogen can kill microbes; too much water causes insufficient air in the pile.

If microorganisms have more surface area to feed off of, the materials will decompose faster. Chopping your organic materials with a machete, or using a shredder or lawnmower to shred materials will help them break down faster.

The compost pile is your oven. Compost piles catch heat created by the activity of millions of microorganisms. The minimum size for hot, fast composting is a 3-foot by 3-foot by 3-foot. But piles wider or taller than 5 feet don't permit enough air to reach the microorganisms at the center.

Your compost pile's microorganisms work their hardest when the materials have about the moistness of a wrung-out sponge and as many air passages. The air in the pile is usually consumed faster than the moisture, so the pile should be turned or mixed up now and then to add more air; this maintains high temperatures and controls odor. Use a pitchfork, rake, or other garden tool can to turn materials with.

About The Author

Carlo Morelli is a writer at OnlineTips.org, where you can read about the best soil composition for roses, wrought iron balusters and other home and garden tips.


Top | Home | Message Board | Site Info & Rules | Report Site Problems

Help Keep The Cauldron Bubbling
by donating or by shopping via our links if you can.
Donations: Donate via PayPal | Donate via Amazon       Our Stores: Doxy's Bazaar
Amazon: Browse Pagan Books | Amazon.com | Amazon CA | Amazon UK
Pagan Supplies: 13 Moons
Stores: Allposters | MailOrderComics.com | Pagan Auctions | Zazzle
Pagan Friendly Web Hosting: Dreamhost (Our Host) | Lunar Pages

Search:
Keywords:
In Association with Amazon.com
Thanks to Cauldron Sponsors
(Sponsor The Cauldron!)

Cheap Web Hosting Report | Witchcraft Supplies Sample Link |