14^—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 6, 1974 ORGANIC LIVING Robert Rodale COMPOST: THE MOST UNDERRATED PRODUCT Compost has always been highly prized by people inside the organic movement. But the general public has found it difficult to get excited about the humus-rich, earthy soil enricher that’s just a few short steps removed from ordinary garbage. Some communities that tried large-scale com posting found they couldn’t even give away the finished product. Shortages of nonrenewable resources are changing all that. Just as scrap metal dealers are finally seeing profit in long-abandoned auto hulks, farmers and municipal officials are beginning to see new value in compost. With prices of nitrogen fertilizers such as anhydrous ammonia rising sharply in past months, it’s suddenly easier to appreciate a “dirt cheap” substance like compost, that can do the same job of replenishing nutrients in farmers’ fields. Thousands of American gardeners have been building and tending small compost piles in their backyards for years. They know the value of homemade compost in increasing vegetable yields. By feeding plant and animal wastes, garbage scraps and other organic matter into their heaps, they are completing an important natural cycle. Once the teemmg microorganisms of decomposition have done their job and the compost is thoroughly rotted, it is ready to enrich their gardens. You can build a frame for your compost pile with whatever natenals are handy. Concrete blocks, bricks, snow fencing, Arire mesh, or stones are all fine. A garbage can with holes ounched in the sides and lid is probably the simplest ap proach of all. Where you locate the pile depends on a number of factors. Many folks prefer an inconspicuous heap, nestled close to hedges or a wall. It’s always a good idea to build your pile close to the garden so you won’t have far to haul the finished compost when it’s ready to be worked into the soil. Ideally, such a spot will also be close enough to your driveway or an alley that it’s accessible to a small truck or station wagon. That way you can dump newly-acquired hay, manure and other bulky wastes right where they’re needed. Build the heap in layers to as high as five feet, alternating about six inches of plant material with two inches of nitrogen nch material such as manure. A sprinkling of rock powder and a quarter inch or so of soil between layers will complete the “sandwich.” It’s important to keep the pile moist (but not wet) and well ventilated. The heap should be turned periodically, so all the Dutch School Natural Foods LARGEST SELECTION OF NATURAL FOODS AND VITAMINS IN CENTRAL PENNA. RT. 222, AKRON, PENNA. PH. 859-2339 HAVE YOUR WELL WATER TESTED FREE! Unfortunately, many, many family and farm water wells are contaminated and unfit to drink Your own drinking water may harbor deadly disease germs typhoid, dysentary, polio, to name just a few Protect your water supply, and your family’s health, by installing the economical, efficient lodmator For complete information on the lodmamics lodmator and how to take your own water sample, write or call w The Witmer Company 35 Oilier Avenue New Holland Pennsylvania 17557 Phone 717/354-4251 By material is thoroughly broken down by the chemical action taking place inside. Expect garden-ready compost in two or three months, or in as little as 14 days if you use a shredder and follow certain techniques. What should you put into your compost pile? Any organic material is a logical ingredient, so let your imagination run free. Many otherwise-troublesome wastes make convenient compost ingredients, as the following examples indicate; LEAVES. Pound for pound, the leaves of most trees contain twice as many minerals as manure. Grind or shred your leaves first to guarantee success. HAY. If you can get hay such as alfalfa or clover during its first year’s growth, it will break down faster in the heap. Shred it first with a rotary lawn mower if you can. SAWDUST. Often available at giveaway prices from local lumber mills, sawdust has excellent soil-building properties. MANURE. High in nitrogen, manure from cattle, horses, goats or poultry is usually the mainstay of a good compost pile. Manure provides necessary bacteria that Help break down the other materials quickly. If you can’t find a fresh supply, bagged, dried manure is available from lawn and garden centers. —GRASS CLIPPINGS AND WEEDS. What could be easier to obtain? Any weed seeds will be killed by the high tem peratures inside the pile (as high as 150 degrees). lANCO BEDDING FOR POULTRY & LIVESTOCK WOOD SHAVJNGS BAGGED or BULK WHITE PINE in BALES CALL 299-3541 LEVEL FLO SILAGE SPREADER IN TWO MODELS TO FIT 10 TO 30 FT. SILO. 9" Steel or Vinyl Fill Pipe installed on any type Silo. • TERRE HILL TRi RIB STAVE SILOS • COLEMAN OXYGEN CONTROLLED SILO • CALUMET LIQUID MANURE EQUIPMENT « P & D SILO UNLOADERS AND • FEED LOT EQUIPMENT SALES & SERVICES STOLTZFUS SILO EQUIPMENT RDI, Box 77 Kinzer, Pa. 17535 Phone 717-768-3873 L ’ , DRIED BLOOD. Collected from slaughterhouses, this ingredient has a high nitrogen content (12 percent or more). BONE MEAL. This is a very good source of phosphorus for the garden. GARBAGE. Relatively high in nitrogen, kitchen scraps decay quickly when added to the green matter in a compost heap. What gardeners are doing on a small scale, communities could be doing on a large scale. “Compost may be the most misunderstood product in America,” says recycling authority Dr. Clark Gregory of Georgia Institute of Technology. Municipal composting plants are operating successfully throughout Europe, Gregory reported after a recent four-month tour. Someday soon, many American communities are going to discover composting as the solution to their sewage and other solid waste disposal problems. We may even see barren strip-mined areas reclaimed with material produced in such plants. The 1974 Composting Conference, scheduled for May 2 and 3 in El Paso, Texas, is expected to draw hundreds of city, state and federal government officials, businessmen, researchers and students. For details, write: Composting Conference, Compost Science Magazine, Emmaus, Penn sylvania 18049* “Make Compost in 14 Days” is a 48-page illustrated booklet that contains all the information you need to make high quality compost quickly and easily. Get your copy by sending 50 cents to Robert Rodale, Organic Living, in care of this newspaper. Ask for the booklet by name and please allow four weeks.for delivery. TRY A CLASSIFIED AD PHONE 626-2191 or 394-3047 i/ 0 iS iS u* u 0 u OO i/* The Rimolicitu System The Simplicity System begins with a tractor. 8 H.P. B True 36" Your yard is a lot more than a lawn, so you need a lot more than a mower You need the Simplidity System Choose your power 8, 10, 13, 16 or 19/ 2 hp Mowing widths 36" to 60” Year-round attachments for lawn, garden, gravel, snow And feature after feature for trouble ee performance You can’t beat the ystem the Simplicity System 350 Strasburg Pike Nature's right-hand man. H. BRUBAKER, INC. Lancaster, Pa. Ph. 397-5179