Making your own compost

Bee keeping, Green House, Organic, Cane Rats, Serpents etc
Post Reply
MustyJ
Posts: 89
Joined: Thu Jun 15, 2017 9:23 pm

Making your own compost

Post by MustyJ »

Organic farming is gradually gaining a foothold in the country. Aside from the obvious benefits of chemical free food, expensive and scarce farm inputs such as fertilizers are pushing small scale farmers to using home developed compost in lieu of synthetic fertiliser for farming.
Other advantages are:

It is cheap because it is derived from crop residues, animal manure, garden weeds, grass, hedge cuttings, kitchen and household waste.

Nutrients from the compost is immediately available for the plant thereby increasing Increased crop yields.

Compost increases the water holding capacity of the soil to better support plants .

nutrients release is gradually, hence the benefits stretches beyond a farming season

It reduces environmental pollution that inorganic fertilisers brings


To make compost is very easy. You can do this in your yard. the following are required:

You may start small with a space of about 4sqm to receive the materials and a smaller space beside it to turn the compost. The location should be sheltered from the wind, rain and sun. Also avoid a location with runoff.

Throw in organic waster materials such as cereals (maize, sorghum, millet) and legumes (beans, cowpea, groundnut) as well as other waster plant materials. Ensure you cut these into bits to aid the breakdown process.

The compost may be above or below ground. If constructed above the ground, scrub the grass and loosen the top few centimetres of soil. If the compost is in a pit, put some top soil at the bottom to introduce micro-organisms.

Build the compost pile by beginning with a bottom layer of bigger sized materials such as maize stalks of about 15cm long.

Add another layer of dry vegetation, hedge cuttings or grass of about 15cm. Sprinkle top soil and add water to moisten the whole layer regularly however avoid making the heap too wet. It should be damp

After 3 days, check for heat. The compost should be warm and after couple of more days, it should cool down. The compost is ready for use on your farm.


Yunan
Posts: 84
Joined: Thu Jun 22, 2017 8:42 am

Re: Making your own compost

Post by Yunan »

Will this smell really bad? Is it something one can do in the backyard?
Josh123
Posts: 27
Joined: Sat Jul 01, 2017 7:52 am

Re: Making your own compost

Post by Josh123 »

Great post
👍
MustyJ
Posts: 89
Joined: Thu Jun 15, 2017 9:23 pm

Re: Making your own compost

Post by MustyJ »

Yunan wrote: Wed Jun 28, 2017 8:15 am Will this smell really bad? Is it something one can do in the backyard?
No that bad. If you allow too much water in, it will rot quickly and smell bad.
Yunan
Posts: 84
Joined: Thu Jun 22, 2017 8:42 am

Re: Making your own compost

Post by Yunan »

Thanks. It will be good for a vegetable garden.
Yunan
Posts: 84
Joined: Thu Jun 22, 2017 8:42 am

Re: Making your own compost

Post by Yunan »

As per my adventurous mind, I have made a little and applied some to part of my small maize farm as a test to see the outcome.
IMG_20170727_171056.jpg
IMG_20170727_171056.jpg (21.37 KiB) Viewed 32749 times
IMG_20170727_171047.jpg
IMG_20170727_171047.jpg (63.51 KiB) Viewed 32749 times
Post Reply