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Composting
Bin
If you have been gardening for very long, and especially if you are an
organic gardener, you know one of the best mulches or soil amendments
that you can add to your garden is natural compost. One
particularly good kind of compost is created in worm bin where red
worms are added to a mixture of bedding and organic waste. One of
the best ways to do this is with what is called a composting bin.
Here are a few tips on how to use these special bins in order to get
top quality compost every time.
Throughout history, it is common knowledge that any gardeners that use
dark, earthy soil as a base for their garden is going to create a
healthy harvest in just a few months based upon the nutritional content
and texture of the soil. If you're soil is not so lucky as to
appear in this way, one of the best ways to improve its quality, soil
fertility, and also to stimulate the health of the roots of your plants
that you are growing is to add vermicomposting material created in a
worm bin.
Although modern technology is a mainstay for most of us including cell
phones, places to live that are interconnected with civilization, and
of course the Internet, this modernistic focus has led to farming means
that are not natural and can damage the soil that we are using.
Using commercial fertilizers and adding inorganic salt based nutrients
with inorganic forms of potassium, phosphorus, and nitrogen, are ways
that most commercial farmers ensure that their crops will grow.
This practice has been shown to create runoff with excessive salts and
nutrient depleted soils.
With this in mind, it is probably time based upon the amazing amount of
organic waste that our modern society produces that we find a way to
take all of this back to the farms and our own homes and start creating
food that is better for us and more nutritious on not only an
individual scale but a global scale. One of these ways is
educating people on the use of compost bins.
They are actually very easy to acquire and also economical.
Within the soil itself, you would add worms but these are not the only
organisms that will be in the dirt aiding the composting process.
Organisms such as worms are helps by fungi, bacteria, mites,
arthropods, and even insects that will love to live in this dark, moist
habitat. The breaking down of organic waste will be accentuated
and what will be left is a soil that is light, crumbly and moist and
ready to interject into the soil that you currently have.
If you live near a large growth of trees, you can use the leaves as
long as you shred them to a size that will compost very quickly.
These will provide a natural source of carbon that the worms it is need
in the bedding of the soil in order to do their job. Make sure
that you do not use live oak trees or even magnolia trees because of
the acidic value with in this carbon base that can be poisonous to the
worms. If the worms die, so does your composting process.
One other thing to consider with composting bins is where you put the
organic material for the worms and how far the worms should be beneath
the soil compost mixture when you start out. As a rule of thumb,
and most average compost containers, you should place a bout a thousand
worms or 1 pound of worms about 6-8 inches beneath the soil, place your
organic material on top, and then place the lid on top of the container
to begin the process. After a period of two to three days
depending upon how many worms you started with and also the amount of
organic material that they have to process, this should be a fine start
toward the creation of your compost as well as a great breeding
environment for your worms.
Although this is common sense, but the more worms you have the better
and the more compost you will inevitably make. By taking the
profits that you will receive from selling excess worms or possibly
excess compost, you can then invest into another container and start
the whole process over again with no additional out-of-pocket expense.
So go out and do your due diligence and find yourself an affordable
compost bin that will allow you to begin the vermicomposting
process. We must all do our part in order to protect ourselves
from food that is contaminated by modernistic processes and go back to
growing some ourselves which will make us healthier and happier.
To Your Organic Gardening
Success!
Chris Dailey
Composting For Profit
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