avoid adding meat or milk products turn the pile over at least once a week make sure you add enough dry stuff like straw, sawdust, grass clippings If it smells bad youre not doing it right. It is too cold and wet. Is it in plastic bags?
bacteria
No, compost bins do not smell if proper materials are recycled and proper procedure is followed, but yes, they will if improper or proper materials are not aerated, layered, moisturized, and turned adequately. Compost bins yield a dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich product with correctly aerated, heated, moisturized carbon- and nitrogen-rich materials.
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.
Rotten ones will be mushy. slimy, and smell like a compost heap.
I would suggest putting orange peels into a worm farm. Orange peels smell good, so they will draw pests to your compost.
No, milk should not be put in the compost pile.Specifically, the drink can be grouped with dairy products. Dairy products emit unpleasant odors as they decompose. The liquid and the smell may attract wildlife to the compost pile.
Air, nutrients and water with procedures followed properly and excess oxygen and sodden greens with procedures gone awry describe what gives compost its smell. Compost is dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich organic matter. It therefore smells of the outdoors when proper materials are composted according to proper methods and with proper inputs.
It should be dark, smell of the earth, and you should not be able to identify what it is made from.
Good compost should be dark, crumbly, and have an earthy smell. It should be free of any unpleasant odors, mold, pests, or pathogens. Additionally, it should be well decomposed, meaning that you should not be able to identify the original materials that went into making the compost.
To determine if compost is ready for use, check if it is dark, crumbly, and has an earthy smell. It should no longer be hot and should have broken down into a uniform texture. You can also do a germination test by planting some seeds in the compost to see if they sprout.
Breakdown of carbon- and nitrogen-rich recyclable materials in cultivated and uncultivated lands or in compost bins, containers, heaps, piles, and pits are ways in which compost can be produced. Compost is organic material which is dark in color, fresh in smell, and rich in nutrients. It represents the end-product of human-intervened or Mother Nature-guided processes.
composting organisms need heat and oxygen to break down the compost. If you don't turn the compost, anaerobic bacteria will take over and cause very bad smell.