Sheet composting is the easiest method of all. However, the method has certain
liabilities. Unless the material being spread is pure manure without significant amounts
of bedding, or only fresh spring grass clippings, or alfalfa hay, the carbon-nitrogen
ratio will almost certainly be well above that of stable humus. As explained earlier,
during the initial stages of decay the soil will be thoroughly depleted of nutrients. Only
after the surplus carbon has been consumed will the soil ecology and nutrient profile
normalize. The time this will take depends on the nature of the materials being composted
and on soil conditions.
If the soil is moist, airy, and warm and if it already contained high levels of
nutrients, and if the organic materials are not ligninous and tough and have a reasonable
C/N, then sheet composting will proceed rapidly. If the soil is cold, dry, clayey
(relatively airless) or infertile and/or the organic matter consists of things like grain
straw, paper, or the very worst, barkless sawdust, then decomposition will be slowed.
Obviously, it is not possible to state with any precision how fast sheet composting would
proceed for you.
Autumn leaves usually sheet compost very successfully. These are gathered, spread over
all of the garden (except for those areas intended for early spring sowing), and tilled in
as shallowly as possible before winter. Even in the North where soil freezes solid for
months, some decomposition will occur in autumn and then in spring, as the soil warms,
composting instantly resumes and is finished by the time frost danger is over. Sheet
composting higher C/N materials in spring is also workable where the land is not scheduled
for planting early. If the organic matter has a low C/N, like manure, a tender green
manure crop not yet forming seed, alfalfa hay or grass clippings, quite a large volume of
material can be decomposed by warm soil in a matter of weeks.
However, rotting large quantities of very resistant material like sawdust can take many
months, even in hot, moist soil. Most gardeners cannot afford to give their valuable land
over to being a compost factory for months. One way to speed the sheet composting of
something with a high C/N is to amend it with a strong nitrogen source like chicken manure
or seed meal. If sawdust is the only organic matter you can find, I recommend an exception
to avoiding chemical fertilizer. By adding about 80 pounds of urea to each cubic yard of
sawdust, its overall C/N is reduced from 500:1 to about 20:1. Urea is perhaps the most
benign of all chemical nitrogen sources. It does not acidify the soil, is not toxic to
worms or other soil animals or microorganisms, and is actually a synthetic form of the
naturally occurring chemical that contains most of the nitrogen in animal urine. In that
sense, putting urea in soil is not that different than putting synthetic vitamin C in a
human body
Burying kitchen garbage is a traditional form of sheet composting practiced by
row-cropping gardeners usually in mild climates where the soil does not freeze in winter.
Some people use a post hole digger to make a neat six-to eight-inch diameter hole about
eighteen inches deep between well-spaced growing rows of plants. When the hole has been
filled to within two or three inches of the surface, it is topped off with soil. Rarely
will animals molest buried garbage, it is safe from flies and yet enough air exists in the
soil for it to rapidly decompose. The local soil ecology and nutrient balance is
temporarily disrupted, but the upset only happens in this one little spot far enough away
from growing plants to have no harmful effect.