Moisture. A dry pile is a cold pile. Microorganisms live in thin films of water that
adhere to organic matter whereas fungi only grow in humid conditions; if the pile becomes
dry, both bacteria and fungi die off. The upwelling of heated air exiting the pile tends
to rapidly dehydrate the compost heap. It usually is necessary to periodically add water
to a hot working heap. Unfortunately, remoistening a pile is not always simple. The nature
of the materials tends to cause water to be shed and run off much like a thatched roof
protects a cottage.
Since piles tend to compact and dry out at the same time, when they are turned they can
simultaneously be rehydrated. When I fork over a heap I take brief breaks and spray water
over the new pile, layer by layer. Two or three such turnings and waterings will result in
finished compost.
The other extreme can also be an obstacle to efficient composting. Making a pile too
wet can encourage soft materials to lose all mechanical strength, the pile immediately
slumps into a chilled, airless mass. Having large quantities of water pass through a pile
can also leach out vital nutrients that feed organisms of decomposition and later on, feed
the garden itself. I cover my heaps with old plastic sheeting from November through March
to protect them from Oregon's rainy winter climate.
Understanding how much moisture to put into a pile soon becomes an intuitive certainty.
Beginners can gauge moisture content by squeezing a handful of material very hard. It
should feel very damp but only a few drops of moisture should be extractable. Industrial
composters, who can afford scientific guidance to optimize their activities, try to
establish and maintain a laboratory-measured moisture content of 50 to 60 percent by
weight. When building a pile, keep in mind that certain materials like fresh grass
clippings and vegetable trimmings already contain close to 90 percent moisture while dry
components such as sawdust and straw may contain only 10 percent and resist absorbing
water at that. But, by thoroughly mixing wet and dry materials the overall moisture
content will quickly equalize.
Size of the pile. It is much harder to keep a small object hot than a large one. That's
because the ratio of surface area to volume goes down as volume goes up. No matter how
well other factors encourage thermophiles, it is still difficult to make a pile heat up
that is less than three feet high and three feet in diameter. And a tiny pile like that
one tends to heat only for a short time and then cool off rapidly. Larger piles tend to
heat much faster and remain hot long enough to allow significant decomposition to occur.
Most composters consider a four foot cube to be a minimum practical size. Industrial or
municipal composters build windrows up to ten feet at the base, seven feet high, and as
long as they want.
However, even if you have unlimited material there is still a limit to the heap's size
and that limiting factor is air supply. The bigger the compost pile the harder it becomes
to get oxygen into the center. Industrial composters may have power equipment that
simultaneously turns and sprays water, mechanically oxygenating and remoistening a massive
windrow every few days. Even poorly-financed municipal composting systems have tractors
with scoop loaders to turn their piles frequently. At home the practical limit is probably
a heap six or seven feet wide at the base, initially about five feet high (it will rapidly
slump a foot or so once heating begins), and as long as one has material for.