Soil is the place where compost tends to end up eventually. The dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich organic material in question results from the human-guided or Mother Nature-directed natural breakdown of carbon- and nitrogen-rich recyclable materials. It tends to be used as soil amendments, fertilizers, mulches, and rejuvenators.
Businesses, gardeners, groups, and nature are places where compost can come from. Compost is dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich organic material which can be produced naturally or through human intervention. It may be home-made or store-bought.
A place that is both away from, and accessible to, the gardener is the best location for composting. The location must be close enough for the gardener to bring out compostable scraps from the kitchen and to bring over compostable yard litter. It needs to be a spot that is somewhat sheltered from extreme weather events and unattractive, if not downright inaccessible, to wildlife.
Composting can be done in backyards or at recycling centers. It deduces landfills and makes good fertilizer.
Mother Nature doesn't compost, She mulches. But, anything that is from the Earth, will return to it, eventually. Put matter in a pile and eventually you will have compost.
The growing point and leaves are at one end the stem with a flat bottom is at the other end. Place the flat end in a pot of compost and eventually the roots will form, given proper treatment. When the roots form it will no longer be a cutting and will be a young plant.
A compost keeper is someone who keeps the vegetable type scraps from meals and every day use, gathers the left overs in a special compost bin, over time the contents of the bin break down and eventually turns into compost that can be used in your garden.
Outside your body.
white dwarf star
A compost heap is the ultimate recycling machine. Collect all your organic waste and treat it properly in a compost heap and you eventually get free compost.
A white dwarf.
compost is made up with old bannana peals and old grass ect.
We know that Tsuna eventually ends up with Kyoko.
Stomach
I KNOW that runoffs eventually go to rivers,streams, and then it goes to the ocean so the answer is OCEAN
Compost goes through cycles of heating and cooling. When your compost cools down, stir it and it should start heating up again.