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Old February 7, 2012   #1
huntsman
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Default Regarding Composting...

...is there any truth in the rumour that wood shavings in the compost heap deplete it of nutrients in the breaking down process, rather than adding to the heap's well being?

I'd always understood that shavings add microscopic 'goodies', but was corrected by a colleague...
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Old February 7, 2012   #2
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Shavings in the compost should be fine. Shavings added INTO the soil around plants could tie up nitrogen temporarily. Shavings used as mulch above ground are ok.
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Old February 8, 2012   #3
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Microbes will consume nitrogen in your compost pile as they grow and multiply anyway. Wood shavings are a good source of carbon and minerals, but may not contain much nitrogen especially if it is aged wood, and it will break down more slowly than other less dense organic matter like leaves. Make sure you add additional sources of available Nitrogen to your pile to supplement what the microbes need and that will help them break down the wood shavings faster.
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Old February 8, 2012   #4
huntsman
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Good to know, fellas - thanks!

So, grass cuttings, the odd bag of compost, etc for Nitrogen?
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Old February 8, 2012   #5
GaryStPaul
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Here's a handy list with some good general info:

http://web.extension.illinois.edu/ho...materials.html

A good source of nitrogen is coffee grounds. Many Starbucks make neat bags available for the taking—not sure that's available where you are. Contrary to some opinion, coffee grounds are not acidic, but close to neutral.

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Old February 8, 2012   #6
Tom C zone 4/5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by huntsman View Post
...is there any truth in the rumour that wood shavings in the compost heap deplete it of nutrients in the breaking down process, rather than adding to the heap's well being?
No wood shavings won't hurt your compost pile.

Quote:
I'd always understood that shavings add microscopic 'goodies', but was corrected by a colleague...
The myth of wood shavings depleating garden soil has been endlessly repeated.

The number of container growers here, who routinely grow their tomato plants in high percentages of wood products in their soil, aught to dispel that part of this old wives tale too.

The short answer is wood breaks down via mycellia action. Those mushrooms take up the nitrogen they need from the air.
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Old February 8, 2012   #7
huntsman
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@ Gary -

Great list - thank you!

2 Tom - Aha! More to this concept than meets the eye, it seems...!
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Old February 8, 2012   #8
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I sprinkle a bit of alfalfa meal into a compost pile every few layers.
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Old February 9, 2012   #9
dice
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Sawdust has a fairly high carbon-nitrogen ratio (from 175-1 to as high
as 675-1 in some studies, depending on what species of wood the sawdust
came from; average is around 400-1). Optimum for compost decay is
around 30-1.

It will still compost at higher carbon-nitrogen ratios than 30-1, but the
process slows down and the pile does not get as hot (more weed seeds
survive in it).

So it would be good to add some high nitrogen sources with sawdust
to a compost pile (grass clippings, alfalfa, tea grounds, etc; mostly
"green stuff".) If you throw in a handful of sulfate of ammonia with it as
a quick, inexpensive nitrogen fix, a gallon of wood ash or a handful of
garden lime or dolomite would be good to add, too, to keep the sulfate
of ammonia from reducing the pH excessively (earthworm "ouch").

A site that lists the N-P-K values of potential compost feedstocks:
http://www.primalseeds.org/npk.htm
(There was another one of these that was posted in an earlier thread that
was good, but it seems to have escaped my bookmarks or landed in a
different hierarchy than "garden->composting". A search through some
earlier threads on composting might turn it up.
[edit:] Ah, here we go:
http://www.thegardenguy.org/html/npk.html
[/edit])


I would expect that a handful of blood meal would be another good way
to add some nitrogen to a layer in a compost pile that is a bit high on
carbon with no negative side-effects on earthworms in the pile. It is a
good use for chicken, turkey, duck, and goose manures, too.
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Last edited by dice; February 9, 2012 at 04:34 PM. Reason: added N-P-K url
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Old February 10, 2012   #10
huntsman
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Morning dice -

That's very helpful, thank you.

Actually I do have chickens and using their manure in the heap was what got the subject started, as I have been using a layer of wood shavings to carpet their living area. Sounds like it might be of added benefit to use straw or similar instead...

Last edited by huntsman; February 10, 2012 at 02:53 AM.
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Old February 10, 2012   #11
dice
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Straw is lower carbon-nitrogen ratio than wood shavings, so will compost
faster. The wood shavings you have now would also have absorbed a fair
amount of chicken urine, which is another high nitrogen material. With that
and the chicken manure, it will probably be fine in the compost pile.
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Last edited by dice; February 12, 2012 at 07:07 PM. Reason: trivial
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Old February 11, 2012   #12
huntsman
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Ah, good point.

They are very well saturated indeed!

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Old February 12, 2012   #13
huntsman
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kath View Post
I sprinkle a bit of alfalfa meal into a compost pile every few layers.
Good idea - thanks, kath!
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Old February 12, 2012   #14
kath
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Quote:
Originally Posted by huntsman View Post
Good idea - thanks, kath!
Probably picked up that tip here at T'ville and since it's a cheap amendment that I always have on hand, I've been using it ever since.
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