How to Grow More Vegetables

(Brent) #1
nitrogenous material,


  • more coarse materials and less fine ones,

  • slightly more soil when building the pile,

  • slightly more water when building the pile, and

  • a “no turn” approach.
    The 9rst time we did this, we got 38% more cured
    compost. One publication implies that up to 100% more
    may be possible.


Note: Do you know that some of the compost—you build and put into the soil for
nutrients for the plants to eat, to act as a sponge to hold water, and to prevent
disease, because it contains antibiotics—can last in the soil up to 5,000 years? What
a wonderful commitment to sustainable soil fertility!


  1. Building a pile with a carbon/nitrogen ratio of 44/1,
    instead of 30/1 or 60/1. Over time the 44/1 cured
    compost consistently produces higher yields of grain and
    biomass. (In one test comparing these three types of
    compost, the 44/1 derived cured compost produced
    double the grain and dry biomass.)

  2. Building a pile which uses more structural forms of
    carbon, such as cellulose and lignin (mature straw and
    stalks) and less metabolic forms of carbon, such as
    sugars and starches (immature leaves and stalks). The
    result may be more durable, lasting cured compost.

  3. Maintaining the curing compost piles, carefully. A cured
    compost pile that has been properly maintained can
    contain 20% or more humus rather than the more

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