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A garden is only as good as the ground that it's planted in. Discussion forum for the many ways to improve the soil where we plant our gardens.

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Old February 5, 2013   #1
billy_prewitt
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Default Free compost from the city..

A local suburban community close to me offers free leaf compost each spring. They take all the collected leaves from the neighborhoods run them thru a grinder shredder turn them multiple times over the winter then have the compost for pick up the beginning of March... I plan on getting a couple yards for the garden, flower beds and shrubs.. and a base start for a composing spot.

My question is what would you add/do to make it a better compost..Sand?.. Peat? mycorrhizae (endo/ecto)?.. E.M. (effective microorganisms) Ph balance? fertilizers ?

Since I'm a new member, if there are threads here you recommend I read please let me know

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Old February 5, 2013   #2
Redbaron
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Quote:
Originally Posted by billy_prewitt View Post
A local suburban community close to me offers free leaf compost each spring. They take all the collected leaves from the neighborhoods run them thru a grinder shredder turn them multiple times over the winter then have the compost for pick up the beginning of March... I plan on getting a couple yards for the garden, flower beds and shrubs.. and a base start for a composing spot.

My question is what would you add/do to make it a better compost..Sand?.. Peat? mycorrhizae (endo/ecto)?.. E.M. (effective microorganisms) Ph balance? fertilizers ?

Since I'm a new member, if there are threads here you recommend I read please let me know

Thanks
Bill
I would mow the lawn and save the grass clippings and mix the grass clippings up with the composted leaves.

That should make a pretty good yet simple and cheap concoction for you.

The other option would simply make it a "brown layer" in a lasagna bed.
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Old February 5, 2013   #3
habitat_gardener
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My aunt had an acre with lots of massive beech trees in NJ and made leaf mold. They raked all the leaves to the edge of the dropoff, and in a couple years, black gold! She grew mostly ornamentals, but could easily plunge her arm elbow-deep into her garden beds. She'd take "slips" of plants everywhere she went and they'd take off in the rich, fluffy soil.

So if the leaf compost is anything like leaf mold (doesn't look like leaves but like rich dark fluffy matter), I'd add it to shrubs and perennials as a top dressing, maybe with a layer of mulch on top. Shrubs and perennials especially like fungal-dominated compost (made mostly from "browns" such as leaves).

For a veg garden, I would mix it with "greens" such as coffee grounds, kitchen and garden trimmings, etc., to make a more complete (bacterial + fungal) compost. (I wouldn't add any of those other things you mention, but I haven't used EMs.) Many coffeeshops, such as Starbucks, offer free coffeegrounds. If you want to apply it directly to the garden, you could add a layer of leaf compost, a layer of coffee grounds, and then mix them together with the top inch or more of soil. If you wanted to buy something to mix in, it'd depend on your soil, but I might use some alfalfa pellets or seedmeal (sparingly -- you don't want an excess of N in your soil).
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Old February 5, 2013   #4
Farmette
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Compost varies greatly. Last yr I got some from the municipal pile. I know it is not organic and one has to be careful, but friends have used it for yrs without trouble. I filled several raised beds with it and didn't add anything. I also paid for a load of mushroom compost mix and put that in another part of the garden. I expected the mushroom compost to outperform the municipal, but it was exactly the opposite. I have never grown tomatoes such as those grown in the municipal mix, which is mostly leaves, and rotted plant material.
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Old February 5, 2013   #5
FILMNET
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I take 2 years here our city does this, huge pile only leafs and paper bags of leafs. Really black after 2 years, they sell it to landscapers who mix it with dirt,Its to black. And a little to us, But i put some in my Compost, to get it working. No more for me i got bad disease.

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Old February 5, 2013   #6
nativeplanter
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When I built my 12 raised beds, I filled them with 1/2 topsoil and 1/2 compost from the local waste center. I later found out that the topsoil was already a blend, so I probably had somewhere between 1/2 and 3/4 compost. But the soil in the beds looked great - nice and black and rich. Unfortunately, it seemed that the compost was not finished when they sold it to me, and for the whole first year my garden was starving for nitrogen. Everything was yellow and lanky. It was so frustrating after having put in so much work to build the beds. At one point I even resorted to dousing some of the beds in diluted industrial ammonia (the kind without the surfactant) just to give the plants some instant relief. They greened up for a little while, then yellowed again. The following year was much better once the compost was able to decompose some more, but I learned a lesson about the variability of quality in municipal compost.
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Old February 6, 2013   #7
zeroma
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Bill,

Go for it. Compost, if it is done will be Ph neutral, so I won't mess with trying to adjust that. Have you had your soil tested? If this is your first year with veggies, you might want to do that. You will know for sure what might be needed. Organic material is always good to add.

I might add worms, like the fishing bait earth worm/night crawlers, or make the beds comfortable for worms to just want to move in. Layer with a few layers of newspaper for that. I use a mix of shredded paper (from our home office shreder) coffee grounds, veggie scrapes in rubbermaid containers right now, and will be adding this once we start warming up.

Free is always good.
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Old February 6, 2013   #8
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Great find, but beware of municipal mulch. No sense in importing other peoples problems. I took my garden tractor over to the woods for leaves and discovered decades of composted leaves about a foot deep. I took the top a little bit from everywhere. Twenty trailer loads later I was exhausted, but it was some of the nicest black gold ever.

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Old February 6, 2013   #9
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I, too, would be leery of using city compost, even if it is supposed to be all leaves, there is no assurance of such. There could be 2-4d in it from yard grass clippings....I have seen it happen already. As stated by hotwired, disease could be present already. We have a state of the art recycling facility in our county...if I toss a bag of diseased tomatoes in the trash, where do I think it will wind up? probably in the compost pile, not the landfill area. This is just my opinion...And do a soil test. SEND it to a soil lab, not just that little Ph test strip or that little test kit from the garden center. Those really aren't very accurate, only a ballpark figure and when growing tomatoes 6.5 is a world away from 7.0 for the plants ability to utilize the nutrients available in the soil.
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Old February 7, 2013   #10
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Hotwired, could you drive some of that compost over here? Dang, some of you guys are so lucky to have great organic material available!

We can't use the "compost" a local city offers here; several years ago a neighbor went in his truck to get a load of some for both of us. He came back with a shocked look and empty truck and I looked in a bucket where he brought back a sample: bits of glass (!), metal, and plastic were clearly visible in the horrible, unfinished mess. I fired an email to the Los Angeles County dept responsible for this offering, saying they should stop unless there is supervision available for all the people dumping their waste there. Never heard back.
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Old February 7, 2013   #11
JamesL
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Hotwired,
Did you shovel that by hand? I don't see a front loader on that tractor.
You need to put a hot tub on your list of projects.
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Old February 7, 2013   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JamesL View Post
Hotwired,
Did you shovel that by hand? I don't see a front loader on that tractor.
You need to put a hot tub on your list of projects.
I have a back loader (loads of back pain). Fortunately, I also have an 24-year-old "almost" son-in-law who's into fitness, so I gave him a workout helping. And I'm in pretty good shape for 67.
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Old February 7, 2013   #13
JamesL
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I have a back loader (loads of back pain). Fortunately, I also have an 24-year-old "almost" son-in-law who's into fitness, so I gave him a workout helping. And I'm in pretty good shape for 67.
Kudos on your use of indentured labor. Keep playing the "almost" card while you can!
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Old February 9, 2013   #14
easttx_hippie
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Having just read about killer compost, I'd test everything that didn't come from my own property before I put it in my garden. There's some nasty stuff out there that makes Agent Orange look like air freshener.....and it doesn't go away.
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Old February 9, 2013   #15
bboomer
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Would you say the same thing about municipal wood chips? I can get tons of it for free. It's just so tempting......
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