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Comprehensive Composting Guide

The document provides steps for composting organic materials. It explains that materials should be chopped to increase surface area for microbes. The moisture content of materials should be adjusted by soaking or sprinkling water. A mixture of carbonaceous and nitrogenous materials should be used at a ratio of 4:1 or less, with some example combinations listed. Proper materials to use in composting are also outlined.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
98 views2 pages

Comprehensive Composting Guide

The document provides steps for composting organic materials. It explains that materials should be chopped to increase surface area for microbes. The moisture content of materials should be adjusted by soaking or sprinkling water. A mixture of carbonaceous and nitrogenous materials should be used at a ratio of 4:1 or less, with some example combinations listed. Proper materials to use in composting are also outlined.

Uploaded by

Diana Daina
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Steps in Composting

Preparation of Substrates

Substrates such as rice straw, weeds and grasses should be chopped. Chopping helps speed
up decomposition by increasing the surface area available for microbial action, and
providing better aeration. If large quantities of substrates are to be used (i.e. several tons),
a forage cutter/chopper is needed. Chopping can be dispensed with if the compost is not
needed in the near future.

Adjustment of Moisture Content

Substrates should be moistened with water. Plant substrates can be soaked overnight in a
pond, which cuts down on the need for water. If a large volume of substrates are to be
composted, a sprinkler is more convenient.

The Compost Mixture

Carbonaceous substrates should be mixed with nitrogenous ones at a ratio of 4:1 or less,
but never lower than 1:1 (on a dry weight basis). Some possible combinations are:

 3 parts rice straw - 1 part ipil-ipil


 4 parts rice straw - 1 part chicken manure
 4 parts grasses - 1 part legume materials + 1 part manure
 4 parts grasses - 1 part Chromolaena odorata or Mikania cordata + 1 part animal
manure

Note: Chromolaena odorata is a common broad-leaf weed. Mikania cordata is an herbaceous


climbing plant, a common weed in the Philippines.

It is important to use grasses and weeds which do not have any flowers or seeds.

What to Feed them:


Fruit and Vegetable waste ( other than citrus fruit)
Used Coffee Grounds with the paper filters
Leaves
Cardboard (just make sure it does not have any glossy paper on it)
Starchy Foods like potatoes, rice, bread or pasta.
All farm animal manures (herbivores)
grass clippings ( make sure there are no pesticides or herbicides on it) (and let it dry for
a couple days to decrease the ammonia released in the worm bins and to prevent it
from heating up the worm bin)
Brown=High Carbon

 Ashes, wood (25)


 Corn Stalk (75)
 Fruit waste (35)
 Leaves (60)
 Peanut shells (35)
 Sawdust (325)
 Straw (75)
 Wood chips (400)

Green=High Nitrogen

 Garden waste (30)


 Grass clippings (20)
 Manures (15)
 Seaweed (19)
 Vegetable scraps (25)
 Weeds (30)

vermicomposting is actually a natural form of recycling organic wastes. You simply use worms to
make this process run its course. These worms then turn these organic scraps into a rich black soil
material, which you can later on use to supplement your plants and soil (amongst other benefits).

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