Through their waste products, and through their abandoned nests, birds may be said to be composters. Specifically, animal waste products often include nitrogen, in the soluble form by which it can be used by soil food web critters, soil and plant roots. Additionally, bird nests tend to include what they recycle from nature. That means that once abandoned, the nests begin the process of breakdown that returns to nature what was taken from it.
compost
Sure, you can put moss in your compost.
no
You won't have any compost next Spring.
To compost their green waste so they then can add it to their yards and gardens.
Rain will not hurt a compost pile, unless it floods. In order for a compost pile to decompose and form compost, it is necessary to keep it from drying out. Rain will assist you in this activity.
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.
Compost goes through cycles of heating and cooling. When your compost cools down, stir it and it should start heating up again.
compost is decomposing waist that is turned back into dirt. We have a compost pile and slowly it decays and turns back into dirt. Compost is also a good way to give wild animals extra food. They come and rummage through your scraps. It helps in more ways than you think it would.
If the owner is too busy or uninformed or if the community has regulations which do not accommodate composting then it would be bad to have a compost bin. For example, a compost bin ideally should be attractive, durable, and stationary (but mobile if need be) to not constitute an eyesore.
The faster it is composted, the less smell. And gardeners want to use compost to help their plants. They would rather make compost than buy it.
A compost pile is compost in a pile or heap. a compost pit is compost in a pit or hole in the ground.