A compost pile is compost in a pile or heap. a compost pit is compost in a pit or hole in the ground.
A compost heap is a pile of composting material that is in a pile on the ground. A compost pit is dug into the ground and the composting material is placed in it.
a. How do you dispose your biodegradables? Do you bury them or put in a compost pit?
A Big compost pile. If for example you were cleaning out a horse barn, cow barn or chicken barn you could pile all the manure, old hay and straw using a skid loader. Make it a nice long row of compost about 4 to 6 feet high and 4 to 6 feet wide and as long as you want. Come back to the pile every 2 or 3 weeks and flip it with the skid loader to let more air into it. You will have nice compost in no time. If you want to have good compost you will need to push all your manure into a liquid pit. Then you will need to pump the liquid manure into a separator, which will make the manure have a moisture of 40-60%. This is then to be piled up in a stock pile until hauled to a field to be piled into windrows. You will pile it as high as your windrow turner is. Your then to check the temperature of the manure, when it reaches 145-165 Degrees you need to turn the pile with a windrow turner. Add water as needed to keep the compost between 40 and 60%. After a period of 90 days it should be ready. You will now take all the compost in the wind row and pile it in a stock pile, let it sit for 30 days to cure. After this 30 days it then can be marketed after you get the soil samples from it.
ang kaibahan Ng compost pit at basket composting
Yes, expired yeast is good for compost. It still has living micro-organisms that can contribute to the breakdown of carbon- and nitrogen-rich recyclables into dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich humus. It also may support the proliferation of beneficial bacteria already in the compost container, heap, pile or pit.
Turn the compost out into a pile next to the bin to "cure". Usually the inside of the bin contents is more broken down than the outside, so as you're turning it, mix the inner and outer parts of the bin contents as you build the curing pile. Break up any wet, slimy parts, and mix them with drier materials. If the contents are too dry, add some water at this stage. The pile should have a 50% moisture content--about as damp as a wrung-out sponge. If you squeeze a handful hard, only a drop or two of moisture should drip out. Make sure the pile is in contact with the ground, so red compost worms and microarthropod "shredders" can enter the pile and go to work on it, breaking it down into smaller and smaller pieces. When you're done, cover the pile with a tarp or sheet of plastic, to keep rain out. Excess water creates slimy, smelly, anaerobic pockets, and leaches water-soluble nutrients out of the pile. Start adding new materials to the bin. Allow the pile to cure for a few weeks to a few months. Longer curing produces compost with more beneficial fungi, which is particularly good for fruiting plants like tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, chiles, squash, melons, and cucumbers.
Any organic plant waste can be composted in a compost heap, and the resulting compost (soil) used in the garden.
Maybe it's a compost pit which means hole where the degradable materials and placed for it to be buried.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the technical stuff! So, like, the main difference between a compose pit and a compose heap is that a compose pit is a reserved area of memory for storing objects that are no longer in use, while a compose heap is a more general term for dynamically allocated memory. It's like the pit is where you toss your old stuff, and the heap is where you go shopping for new stuff.
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Twenty-five to 30 parts to one part is the combination of compost. The combination reminds compost-minded cultivators, farmers, gardeners, growers and orchardists of the ratio of carbon- to nitrogen-rich compostable, recyclable materials. Twenty-five to 30 parts of carbon will keep the compost container, heap, pile or pit from decomposing too slowly whereas one part of nitrogen will keep compostables from smelling.
The best compost is made from leaves shed in the fall. For the best results, shred the leaves and wet them down and keep them in a pile or better in a compost bin. Turning them occasionally also speeds up the process.