Fertilizing Vegetables with Compost
Will a five ton per acre addition of compost provide enough nutrition to grow great
vegetables? Unfortunately, the answer usually is no. In most gardens, in most climates,
with most of what passes for "compost," it probably won't. That much compost
might well grow decent wheat.
The factors involved in making this statement are numerous and too complex to fully
analyze in a little book like this one. They include the intrinsic mineralization of the
soil itself, the temperature of the soil during the growing season, and the high
nutritional needs of the vegetables themselves. In my experience, a few alluvial soils
that get regular, small additions of organic matter can grow good vegetable crops without
additional help. However, these sites are regularly flooded and replenished with highly
mineralized rock particles. Additionally, they must become very warm during the growing
season. But not all rock particles contain high levels of plant nutrients and not all
soils get hot enough to rapidly break down soil particles.
Soil temperature has a great deal to do with how effectively compost can act as
fertilizer. Sandy soils warm up much faster in spring and sand allows for a much freer
movement of air, so humus decomposes much more rapidly in sand. Perhaps a sunny, sandy
garden on a south-facing slope might grow pretty well with small amounts of strong
compost. As a practical matter, if most people spread even the most potent compost over
their gardens at only twenty-five pounds per 100 square feet, they would almost certainly
be disappointed.
Well then, if five tons of quality compost to the acre isn't adequate for most
vegetables, what about using ten or twenty tons of the best. Will that grow a good garden?
Again, the answer must allow for a lot of factors but is generally more positive. If the
compost has a low C/N and that compost, or the soil itself, isn't grossly deficient in
some essential nutrient, and if the soil has a coarse, airy texture that promotes
decomposition, then somewhat heavier applications will grow a good-looking garden that
yields a lot of food.
However, one question that is rarely asked and even more rarely answered satisfactorily
in the holistic farming and gardening lore is: Precisely how much organic matter or humus
is needed to maximize plant health and the nutritional qualities of the food we're
growing? An almost equally important corollary of this is: Can there be too much organic
matter?
This second question is not of practical consequence for biological grain/livestock
farmers because it is almost financially impossible to raise organic matter levels on farm
soils to extraordinary amounts. Large-scale holistic farmers must grow their own humus on
their own farm. Their focus cannot be on buying and bringing in large quantities of
organic matter; it must be on conserving and maximizing the value of the organic matter
they produce themselves.
Where you do hear of an organic farmer (not vegetable grower but cereal/livestock
farmer) building extraordinary fertility by spreading large quantities of compost,
remember that this farmer must be located near an inexpensive source of quality material.
If all the farmers wanted to do the same there would not be enough to go around at an
economic price unless, perhaps, the entire country became a "closed system" like
China. We would have to compost every bit of human excrement and organic matter and there
still wouldn't be enough to meet the demand. Even if we became as efficient as China, keep
in mind the degraded state of China's upland soils and the rapid desertification going on
in their semi-arid west. China is robbing Peter to pay Paul and may not have a truly
sustainable agriculture either.