CHAPTER THREE
Practical Compost Making
To make compost rot rapidly you need to achieve a strong and lasting rise in
temperature. Cold piles will eventually decompose and humus will eventually form but,
without heat, the process can take a long, long time. Getting a pile to heat up promptly
and stay hot requires the right mixture of materials and a sensible handling of the pile's
air and moisture supply.
Compost piles come with some built-in obstacles. The intense heat and biological
activity make a heap slump into an airless mass, yet if composting is to continue the pile
must allow its living inhabitants sufficient air to breath. Hot piles tend to dry out
rapidly, but must be kept moist or they stop working. But heat is desirable and watering
cools a pile down. If understood and managed, these difficulties are really quite minor.
Composting is usually an inoffensive activity, but if done incorrectly there can be
problems with odor and flies. This chapter will show you how to make nuisance-free
compost.
Hot Composting
The main difference between composting in heaps and natural decomposition on the
earth's surface is temperature. On the forest floor, leaves leisurely decay and the
primary agents of decomposition are soil animals. Bacteria and other microorganisms are
secondary. In a compost pile the opposite occurs: we substitute a violent fermentation by
microorganisms such as bacteria and fungi. Soil animals are secondary and come into play
only after the microbes have had their hour.
Under decent conditions, with a relatively unlimited food supply, bacteria, yeasts, and
fungi can double their numbers every twenty to thirty minutes, increasing geometrically:
1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1,024, 2,048, 4,096, etc. In only four hours one
cell multiplies to over four thousand. In three more hours there will be two million.
For food, they consume the compost heap. Almost all oxygen-breathing organisms make
energy by "burning" some form of organic matter as fuel much like gasoline
powers an automobile. This cellular burning does not happen violently with flame and
light. Living things use enzymes to break complex organic molecules down into simpler ones
like sugar (and others) and then enzymatically unite these with oxygen. But as gentle as
enzymatic combustion may seem, it still is burning. Microbes can "burn"
starches, cellulose, lignin, proteins, and fats, as well as sugars.
No engine is one hundred percent efficient. All motors give off waste heat as they run.
Similarly, no plant or animal is capable of using every bit of energy released from their
food, and consequently radiate heat. When working hard, living things give off more heat;
when resting, less. The ebb and flow of heat production matches their oxygen consumption,
and matches their physical and metabolic activities, and growth rates. Even single-celled
animals like bacteria and fungi breathe oxygen and give off heat.
Soil animals and microorganisms working over the thin layer of leaf litter on the
forest floor also generate heat but it dissipates without making any perceptible increase
in temperature. However, compostable materials do not transfer heat readily. In the
language of architecture and home building they might be said to have a high "R"
value or to be good insulators When a large quantity of decomposing materials are heaped
up, biological heat is trapped within the pile and temperature increases, further
accelerating the rate of decomposition.