You either turn them over so they compost or you let them grow and use them. It is better to remove potatoes from your compost heap turning them over will make no difference.
Vegetables are the food items that compost the quickest. Leaves, plants and trimmings can decompose within six months at most. This contrasts with avocado and peach stones and with cabbage and sprout stems that will take more than three years.
A compost heap is hot in the middle because this is where the microbes are starting to break down the material in the compost heap and as part of their process they generate heat.
A compost heap has slits at the bottom so that oxygen can circulate through the dirt.
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Communal gardens, community centers, and neighborhood centers are ways in which a community can use a compost heap. A compost heap may be constructed as part of a neighborhood association pooling resources. It also may serve as a role model and teaching resource in centers and schools.
A compost heap is either anearobic or aerobic. Anaerobic bacteria are usually quite smelly, so to encourage aerobic bacteria, the compost heap supports are designed to allow air to get at as much as possible of the compost, by having gaps between them.
A compost pile is compost in a pile or heap. a compost pit is compost in a pit or hole in the ground.
bacteria
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School gardens and science experiments are ways in which a school can use a compost heap. A compost heap functions as a repository for kitchen scraps and yard debris. It may lend itself therefore to community gardens and science class experiments.
Absolutely. ^_^ Rabbit droppings make GREAT compost!
Yes most definitely, everything from a kitchen should be put back into a compost heap, if you want to know how to do it go to: www.windwand.co.nz/organickitchengarden.htm and it will show you how to make compost and liquid fertilizers