Composting

Overview:

Composting your yard waste is a responsible step towards reducing load on our landfills.  Plus you can create the highest-quality soil amendment known to gardeners! 

Composting is an accelerated decomposition of dead plant material.  The process is managed by humans.  Keys to compost success include:

  • critical mass - start with a large-enough pile of material, at least one cubic yard
  • balanced carbon to nitrogen ratio within the pile
  • sufficient moisture - barely a drop of water will drip when squeezing a handful of the compost material
  • regular aeration - microorganisms within the compost need oxygen

Intensively managed piles may be "done" in as few as 3 weeks, but many gardeners allow the compost to "cook" twice that time or longer.

Composting resources:

Utah State University Extension offers many excellent publications on composting at their publications website, http://extension.usu.edu//publications  Search for "compost".

turning the compost
"Turning" the compost is an important task; it provides oxyen to the microorganisms within the pile.  Piles can be turned with a spading fork.