subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite map
 


Muskogee, OK
    
CLICK FOR WEATHER

All the Dirt on Gardening

It's too cold now to be outside except to run from one place to another. Some gardeners are still getting dirt on their hands and most of us are delving into the catalogs that arrive daily. Leave a note and share your garden with us.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Autumn Leaves Become Compost Thanks to Microbes

Leaves in autumn colors of red, yellow, orange and brown are falling. There was a time that piles were made in yards and on the street for children to play in. Nothing could compare with jumping in them and it was a sad day when they were burned for the season.

Today, leaf piles are still fun for kids to play in but for the most part they are no longer burned. Now we know that burning leaves creates fire danger, smoke and environmental hazards. Also, we have learned that composted leaves are one of the best nutritional tonics for our gardens.

Fall leaves, composted and dug into your garden will improve the soil and keep it productive longer each year. Digging in the compost makes gardening less expensive because less water and fertilizer are needed.

A simple compost bin can be set up in an area that is only 3-feet by 3-feet.

Leaves are high in carbon and low in nitrogen, so add nitrogen. Use fertilizer or organic matter such as grass clippings, manure, garden debris such as weeds, or green waste from the kitchen. Vegetable and fruit peels or scraps, coffee grounds, tea bags and similar non-meat, non-dairy products are best.

To add nitrogen fertilizer, put one-fourth cup of lawn fertilizer between layers of leaves. Or put a layer of weeds and kitchen waste between each layer of leaves.

“Piling the compost pile in layers is easier, but mixing everything with a pitch fork and watering the pile is better,” said Misch Lehrer, manager of Soilutions in Albuquerque NM. Soilutions (www.soilutions.net/) is an organic materials recycler.

Watering is required if you want to be sure to have great compost by spring. If you don’t need the compost for next spring, just let the pile sit for two years until it is ready.

Using the lawn mower to chop leaves can make them so fine that they form a compacted pile that doesn’t have enough air for the bacteria to grow. To open up the pile and add air space, mix in some small sticks and twigs or green matter.

When they are dug into beds, decomposed leaves and organic matter, feed the soil.

Lehrer said, “Compost is created when micro-organisms feed on organic materials and begin the biological process of breaking them down into a form that plants and soil organisms can reuse. Heat in compost is generated by the metabolism of the micro-organisms that are eating the plant material.”

“Technically, compost feeds the microbes. Microbe digestive waste and cadavers feed the plants like fertilizer,” Lehrer said.

You can also use leaves as mulch before they are decomposed. In this form they smother anything that could grow under them. A pile of leaves prevents sun, water and weed seeds from touching the ground. The leaves protect the ground from heat, cold, evaporation and wind.

Leaves left whole or in piles on the yard over winter will smother the grass underneath. Leaves piled onto an area where you want to make a vegetable or flowerbed next year will smother the weeds and encourage the soil below to soften.

Fall planted, spring blooming bulbs benefit from a layer of leaves on top by preventing rain from soaking in and rotting the bulbs.

If composting piles of leaves is not practical, fill trash bags with moistened leaves, close the bag and poke a few air holes in it. In the spring you can dig leaf compost into beds or use it as mulch around plants.

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Critters in the Garden - Compost Worms


At 60-degrees and sunny this could be called a perfect day for being in the yard. I must admit that digging out weeds is getting old though and I can't wait for something that seems more productive, like seeing seeds sprout.
Where do the creatures go in winter? We rescue turtles from the neighborhood dogs' mouths and babies are born here. But where are they now?
I crawled around flower beds to seek and destroy weeds, move leaves and flower stalks but I found no wildlife anywhere.

COMPOST WORMS For Earth Day this year I'm going to give away composting worm kits, so gardeners and kids can see how food scraps can become good earth for growing plants.

So, I've been reading worm blogs on the Internet and searching for compost worm articles. Did you know that 25% of landfill is food scraps that could be composted to make rich garden soil instead?

I found worm cartoons on You Tube.

Here are some interesting sites about composting with red worms:

Red Worm Composting

Earth Worm Digest

Uncle Jim's Worm Farm

Urban Agriculture

Allied Waste Company has good basic how to info on their site and they aren't selling anything either. < ; - )

Here are their basic instructions on Start a Worm Bin
- Find or build a shallow container (about l6-l8 inches deep), wooden boxes, plastic storage containers work well. Drill drainage holes.
- Fill your worm bin with moist bedding - brown leaves, shredded paper or cardboard, straw or peat moss -work well. Add a handful of dirt.
- Add about one pound of-red wriggler composting worms (will consume about 1/2 pound of food a day)- check in friend's compost pile or call a worm supplier
- Rotate the burial location of food scraps throughout the bin.
- Every 3 to 6 months push the old bedding and decomposing scraps to one side of the bin, re-bed the empty side and start burying food waste in the fresh bedding
- After allowing the older scraps to finish for another month or so, remove the compost and add more fresh bedding

Another idea from my brother who has done this before, was to put 4-bales of straw in a square, put in the moistened bedding and previously rotted food scraps or composted manure. As the worms multiply they will move into the straw bales.

As the bales collapse, put two of them onto the garden and use the other two to start the next round.

By the way, compost worms cannot survive in the garden where earthworms thrive.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2006. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.