Increase your web traffic now.
Composting Banner

Organic Gardener's Composting by Steve Solomon

Making Hot Compost (12)

If the pile did not initially heat very much or the heating stage was very brief, then the pile probably lacked nitrogen. The solution for a nitrogen-deficient pile is to turn it, simultaneously blending in more nutrient-rich materials and probably a bit of water too. After a few piles have been made novice composters will begin to get the same feel for their materials as bakers have for their flour, shortening, and yeast.

It is also possible to err on the opposite end of the scale and make a pile with too much nitrogen. This heap will heat very rapidly, become as hot as the microbial population can tolerate, lose moisture very quickly, and probably smell of ammonia, indicating that valuable fixed nitrogen is escaping into the atmosphere. When proteins decompose their nitrogen content is normally released as ammonia gas. Most people have smelled small piles of spring grass clippings doing this very thing. Ammonia is always created when proteins decompose in any heap at any C/N. But a properly made compost pile does not permit this valuable nitrogen source to escape.

There are other bacteria commonly found in soil that uptake ammonia gas and change it to the nitrates that plants and soil life forms need to make other proteins. These nitrification microorganisms are extremely efficient at reasonable temperatures but cannot survive the extreme high temperatures that a really hot pile can achieve. They also live only in soil. That is why it is very important to ensure that about 10 percent of a compost pile is soil and to coat the outside of a pile with a frosting of rich earth that is kept damp. One other aspect of soil helps prevent ammonia loss. Clay is capable of attracting and temporarily holding on to ammonia until it is nitrified by microorganisms. Most soils contain significant amounts of clay.

prev, home, next, contents,
home,
about compost,
cold composting
hot composting
compost tea
compost and watering
  worm compost
  compost sieve
  compost raised bed
  Organic Gardener's Composting
   by Steve Solomon


New section from Solomon: Methods of Composting

New section from Solomon: Chapter Six
Worm Composting [Vermicomposting]


Composting news from around the world
interesting links
gardening(mostly organic) links

Colloidal Composting Secrets!
The different way to make compost. No bins, no turning, just results that can be seen and tasted in the miraculaous plants you grow. Want the best and easiest compost ever? Want the results that no one else has? Come and see.



home   about compost   cold composting   hot composting   compost tea   compost and watering   worm compost  compost sieve  compost raised bed  Organic Gardener's Composting  by Steve Solomon   Compost News from Around the World  interesting links gardening(mostly organic) links

Click Here To Download Free Music and Movies