Ed Bruske explains the benefits of composting, and how to start a compost pile
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Transcript
Hi, I’m Ed Bruske with DC Urban Gardeners, we’re here in my garden in the District of Columbia talking about composting. What you saw me doing there was just putting a layer of grass clippings that I clipped from my yard the last couple of days and kept in this garbage can. Putting that on the new compost pile that I’ve just recently started. Now what I have at the very bottom of the pile are some weeds that I pulled from the garden, and believe me I’ve got plenty of those. No kitchen scraps yet, what I want to do is get the pile big enough using some of my other materials before I actually start putting bearings on kitchen scraps on there. So I’ve put down a layer of grass as you remember from one of the earlier episodes we talked about balancing nitrogen or green materials such as grass clippings. With brown materials such as leaves, and the leaves I shredded earlier and I’m going to put a load of, or a layer, excuse me, of leaves on that pile now just over the grass clippings. So, now we have weeds, grass clippings, and leaves. One of the things you want to think about at this point is that, grass clippings, if you have a thick layer of those. They have a tendency to get wet and matte together so that the water stays in the grass clippings and doesn’t filter through and that can lead to an anaerobic bacteria situation where you start to get stinky and slimy grass in there. So you got the leaves that have all been shopped up, we’re going to, what I like to do at this point is to mix them up a little bit so that we don’t get that matting happening in the compost pile. So, I would just be flopping things with my fork spade, digging there a little bit; lifting twisting, to get the leaves mixed up with the grass and even some of the weeds down there, pull those up so that they’ll meet in the mix as well. Now that will help keep air in the pile and keep the water flowing through the pile rather than setting in any one particular layer and creating problems. And what you would continue to do as you build your pile, is add to that, I have a bucket of compost; you could use soil as well, but its good to put some of that in there because that actually introduces more of those bacteria that have been activated. That gets some in the pile, it just gets things working a little bit faster. So continue that sort of thing; weeds, garden debris, grass clippings, leaves, other brown materials, even shredded newspaper or cardboard for your brown materials. You just keep building that up adding a little bit of soil, giving a sprinkle of water in there so it has some water, and pretty soon you’re going to have a good, active compost pile. Next,we’re going to talk about what this compost does for your soil and plant
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