Yes, you can grow vegetables in compost. Compost provides nutrients and improves soil quality, which can help vegetables thrive and produce a healthy harvest.
To effectively grow vegetables in a compost pile, ensure the compost is well-balanced with a mix of green and brown materials. Plant seeds or seedlings directly into the compost, ensuring they have enough space to grow. Water regularly and monitor for pests. Harvest vegetables when they are ready.
In a vegetable garden with compost and seeds.
I have had luck with compost. But it depends what is in the compost, like in mine I had egg shells,and other vegetables.
Fruits and vegetables are the crops which grow in compost. Crops benefit from soil amendments, fertilizers, and mulches. Dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich compost serves all three purposes.
Facilitation of air and water pore spaces, improvement in soil structure and texture, and supply of necessary macro- and micro-nutrients are ways in which compost and fertilizer make vegetables grow faster. Compost and fertilizer contain organic elements and trace minerals which strengthen a plant's roots and shoots. They also encourage the well-being of soil food web members which make sure that roots have space in which to grow downward, sideways, and upward.
Yes, you can compost moldy vegetables. The heat generated during the composting process will help break down the mold and turn the vegetables into nutrient-rich soil.
Compost can help your plants grow better
compost
Compost helps plants grow.
old vegetables
vegetables and fruits
compost