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About Long Island Gardener
Expertise
How to grow the Perfect Lawn? If you live in the Northeast/Atlantic Coast, I have intelligent answers on grass selection, fertilizers, soil care, weed control, and lawnmowers. Although I have degrees in related fields, a person's real gardening skills are learned from trial and error. More important, I am strict about not using chemicals in the garden. Organic gardening is not just earth friendly and healthier for you, your children and your pets. It's less expensive and easier. You read that right. Less expensive and easier.

Experience
Homeowner for 15 years, 30 years of gardening for personal pleasure, college credits in horticulture and botany, volunteer docent at the local botanical gardens, and a whole library of gardening and landscaping books at home some 100 years old.

 
   

You are here:  Experts > Style > Landscaping > Lawns > compost bins

Topic: Lawns



Expert: Long Island Gardener
Date: 8/1/2008
Subject: compost bins

Question
Do compost items really work for the lawn and what do you put in the bins?  How long does it take to make compost?  I read somewhere that paper and leftovers are compost items.  What about the roaches and such?  And how do you apply this compost on the lawn?  Do you have to water it down or what?  Are they better than chemical fertilizers? What is your opinion of Milorganite?

Answer
The Big Bang you get from this stuff comes from the high concentration of microorganisms that nutrient-rich Compost generates.

Putting those microorganisms anywhere in the Soil is like building tiny food factories underground.  When you apply Compost to the rhizosphere of a Grass plant, you're serving it a 10-course gourmet meal in a 5-star Michelin French Restaurant.  The microorganisms sometimes generate growth hormones, or rev up metabolism, or build natural chelators ('siderophores') that to fine tune the power-packed Humic Substances.

California's Integrated Waste Management Board posts instructions for making Compost on its website:

www.ciwmb.ca.gov/Organics/HomeCompost/

Compost bins attract the usual crowd of bugs.  But they heat up internally, canceling Weed Seed viability and pathogens among other things.  This is what happens when microbes decompose materials.  Compost happens.

Compost is ready by Spring.  You can top dress your Lawn or anything else you are growing.  If you play your cards right, Earthworms will take over the work, incorporating the finished Compost right into your Soil.  Earthworms love doing this.  Be nice to them.

Didn't someone once say that Roaches have been around since before the last Ice Age?  These are one of the most resilient creatures that was ever made, but they are still one of the creepiest in my book.  I don't like them one bit.  There may be a place for them in a Compost Pile, but not in my backyard.  See what those California Composters say about it in the section called 'Compost Pile Critters'.

Grass clippings, dead leaves, vegetables and fruits, even leftover juice make terrific Compost.  They're also teeming with microbes that fight Fungus attacks and help your plants resist parasites.  And these bioflora are so effective, in fact, that any vegetables you do grow in them not only taste better, but they have more vitamins.  See this essay on Organic Gardening 101:

www.helium.com/items/1027355-how-to-go-green-on-the-farm-top-10-tips

This is relatively new science and it's not something most people are very familiar with.  But pound for pound, Compost is the only way to garden in the 21st century.  George Jetson would definitely approve.

THE LONG ISLAND GARDENER

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