Keep composting simple

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Look on the shelves of almost any store or in any catalog selling plants and gardening equipment and you’ll find “compost activators.” These mixtures contain beneficial microorganisms, nutrients, and/or more esoteric substances meant to speed composting or improve the quality of the finished compost.

Look on the shelves of almost any store or in any catalog selling plants and gardening equipment and you’ll find “compost activators.” These mixtures contain beneficial microorganisms, nutrients, and/or more esoteric substances meant to speed composting or improve the quality of the finished compost.

Despite the beneficial organisms and nutrients they contain, however, compost activators generally are neither needed nor cost-effective. If you could take a microscope to the pea vines, old delphinium stalks and lettuce plants tossed onto a compost pile, you’d see they already are seething with microorganisms, just what’s needed to get decomposition underway.

As raw materials are piled together, these microorganisms get to work and rapidly multiply, as long as they also have sufficient moisture and air.

WHAT DOES

A COMPOST PILE NEED?

Composting microorganisms are most hungry for the elements carbon and nitrogen, the ideal being a ratio of about 15 parts carbon to one part nitrogen.

Carbon as a compost food comes from bulky, old plant material, such as straw, hay, autumn leaves, wood chips and old weeds and garden plants. It would be impossible to stuff suitable quantities of any of these materials in a box of “compost activator.”

Nitrogen could be squeezed into a box but also could be added by sprinkling nitrogen fertilizer or layers of manure on the pile as it grows. Young, succulent weeds and garden plants and kitchen scraps also are high in nitrogen.

KEEP TABS

ON PROGRESS

Monitor the progress and health of your compost pile with your eyes and your nose — your eyes preferably on a thermometer. As long as the materials are moist, a pile that doesn’t heat up indicates insufficient nitrogen or excess carbon. A pile that smells bad signals the opposite. Either condition can be corrected by adding the needed nitrogen or carbon materials.

Or by giving it time. A pile deficient in nitrogen, or built slowly during a long period, might never get hot but, in time, will turn to rich, brown compost. Be patient.

The only compost piles that might be candidates for compost activators would be those oddball piles built almost exclusively of offbeat materials, such as sawdust, or with a lot of plant debris that were heavily sprayed with pesticides. Such piles could lack the necessary organisms, temporarily at least (sawdust alone is severely deficient in nitrogen). Even then, some soil and fertilizer likely would serve just as well.

So, pay attention to the ratio of the various things you add to your compost pile, and then watch and smell what happens.

Whatever you do, don’t fret too much about details. Any pile of organic materials, kept moist, eventually will turn to compost.