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Every year millions of people make New Year resolutions like losing weight. My New Year resolutions for 2011 were all about eco-friendly living. They can be listed as: using less paper products and plastic water bottles, reducing the use of gas by driving less, and (the most important one) learning how to compost.
Composting is one of the most eco-friendly things you can do for household kitchen waste. Up to 50-70% of kitchen waste can be turned into valuable, organic fertilizer. It reduces the amount of methane emitted from landfills and can be used in your garden as a cost efficient, organic way to increase soil fertility. Nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus will be produced naturally by the feeding of microorganisms, for that reason very few soil additives will be needed in your garden. Also, composting brings down the over-all footprint of your home as it contributes towards waste saving.
Composting is one of the most eco-friendly things you can do for household kitchen waste. Up to 50-70% of kitchen waste can be turned into valuable, organic fertilizer. It reduces the amount of methane emitted from landfills and can be used in your garden as a cost efficient, organic way to increase soil fertility. Nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus will be produced naturally by the feeding of microorganisms, for that reason very few soil additives will be needed in your garden. Also, composting brings down the over-all footprint of your home as it contributes towards waste saving.
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This is the cheapest and easiest way to compost. |
All you need is a plastic container with a lid, like the ones they sell at supermarkets and home improvement stores. Then you need to drill a few holes on the side for ventilation; you are ready to start composting. You can put vegetable and fruit peels, egg shells, flowers, leaves, coffee grounds, corn cubs, and spinach stems in your pile of compost. You should know that composting organisms need 4 equally important things to work effectively:
- Carbon (or carbs) for energy - the oxidation of carbon produces the heat. High carbon materials tend to be brown and dry.
- Nitrogen (or protein) to grow and reproduce more organisms to oxidize the carbon. High nitrogen materials tend to be green and wet.
- Oxygen to oxidize the carbon for the decomposition process.
- Water- in the right amounts to maintain activity.
Furthermore you need to stir it every day to ensure aeration; the pile should not be too wet or too dry - it should have the moisture content of a sponge. Even more important, avoid putting in rotten or cooked leftover food especially it if contains spices, meat, fat, grease, and oil. A compost pile uses aerobic respiration and apart from attracting fruit flies, which are a normal part of the process, it does not attract house flies, worms, cockroaches, or rats. These will appear only if you add meat to the pile.
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Devrim, composting is a great resolution! We have been composting at our house for a few years now, and have found it to be much easier than people expect. Keeping compostable matter out of landfills is very desirable. And speaking of desirable, the compost you turn out will be great in your herb garden! I can't wait to hear how this works out for you. Good luck, and great work.
ReplyDeleteLynee, I agree with you completely. I'm planning to use it in the herb garden:)
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