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Compost Activators

Boost the Nutrients
to Feed your Micro Herd

Making compost sometimes takes longer than it should for impatient gardeners like me. Using compost activators can sometimes give your compost a boost and get it going quicker.

Fast compost retains more nutrients that will be available to plants more quickly.

The more compost you make, the faster you can place it on the garden and get the plants growing.

Vegetables grown with compost made by the quick method are more nutritious, healthier and pest resistant.

Slow sluggish compost can be re-activated by adding certain materials which heat it up and get the micro-organisms re-energized.

The heat that a good working compost pile gives off is simply a sign that all is well, and the billions of micro flora and fauna - the tiny animals, bacteria and fungi - are thriving and reproducing at a rapid rate.

Heat in itself is not the aim; the microscopic life and its health is.

Feed the micro herd and the warmth it produces in its life processes is the byproduct.

Certain compost activators can be added to your compost pile to provide for the health and well being of your micro herd.

  • Sometimes simply the addition of dolomite lime, finely ground and powdery, can change an acid and slowly fermenting compost of pine needles to a rip roaring furnace of nutrient production.

  • Glacial rock dust is a valuable addition to the compost bin as it adds the minute amounts of nutrients that the micro herd needs.

  • Compost tea can be sprinkled on to stir things up, giving even a carbon rich pile of wood shavings from a barn the extra nitrogen for rapid decomposition.

  • Urine, either human or from a horse barn can be used to quickly fire a pile of sticks or leaves. This has also been termed Liquid Organic Fertilizer, or L.O.F.

Using any of these forms of rapidly available urea or nitrogen can get a slow cold compost pile moving again, or the addition of an activator that simply changes the pH of the compost sometimes is all that's needed.

Some compost activators are commercially available, but expensive, so using those that you can produce yourself is better for your sustainable garden.

Caution:

Adding grain can give vermin a food source but by placing these types of things in the center of the pile only, and watering well after adding them so they heat up quickly, your pile will be inhospitable to mice or rats.
  • A mixture of dried weeds or green manure cover crops such as comfrey, alfalfa, nettles, mullein and many other accumulators adds that elusive minor element or missing nutrient.

  • Mixing or layering in rancid flour or grain, spoiled chicken or other animal feed, or alfalfa pellets can give a compost pile the activation it needs to get good and hot.

Compost activators are yet another ally in the organic and sustainable garden for getting more compost faster.

You can never have too much compost; in fact, I don’t think you can ever have enough.


Compost Activators top of page





go to Drought Smart Plants home page

Sustainable Gardening

Composting Instructions

Composting Tips


Sustainable Gardening

The Unbroken Circle in an Organic Garden

Learning how sustainable gardening all meshes together in a fascinating and miraculous web is all consuming for those of us that like to see how things work.

Click on the pictures to explore...

Broody hen in her box

Whether you're starting a garden or you're an experienced organic vegetable grower, here are a few easy ways to get started on sustainable gardening.

Raising some backyard chickens for eggs and compost, learning how to make compost tea, and composting are all useful skills.

Follow the composting instructions and these useful composting tips for the best compost ever.

Stucco Wire Compost Bins

Find out some ways to improve your soil with composting, making new gardens with lasagna gardening.

Solarization is an easy way to harness the suns power. See how your sustainable your garden can be.

Priory Garden Twig Fence

Learn about the 'stinking rose' - garlic and how to make garlic braids from your organically produced crop.

Still got questions?

Ask the Horticulturist!

Sustainable Gardening E-Book

Still looking for something? Check out the Sustainable Gardening Site Map for a list of all pages under this topic.

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