How quickly can you make compost?

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asked Sep 16, 2023 in Gardening by Bookofken (3,540 points)
How quickly can you make compost?

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answered Sep 19, 2023 by Gangass (12,870 points)
The quickest you can make compost is 2 weeks although at 2 weeks the compost won't be very goo compost.

Making very good compost takes some time and the longer you wait for the compost the better the compost will be.

Good compost can take 6 months to a year and if you can keep a good compost pile going the really great compost will be after 2 years.

Good ready to use compost is ready when it has cooled, turned a rich brown color, and has decomposed into small soil-like particles.

Compost can take anywhere between 24 hours to a year or more to make, depending on the method you opt.

Electric composters are the fastest way to make compost, and can break down your food waste in 24 hours or less.

Other indoor composting methods typically take a lot longer than outdoor methods to create compost.

In hot, dry weather, regularly adding water to a hot compost process is often a necessity.

A minimum moisture content of 50% is recommended for compost to support a hot compost process.

A hot compost pile can easily lose 1% of moisture content every day.

Don't add fish, meat, dairy products, bones, baked goods, fatty foods or grease to your compost pile.

These food scraps do not easily decompose and may attract animals.

Don't use diseased plants or plants that are toxic to other plants.

Composting is a controlled, aerobic (oxygen-required) process that converts organic materials into a nutrient-rich soil amendment or mulch through natural decomposition.

The end product is compost – a dark, crumbly, earthy-smelling material.

Compost is decomposed organic material. Compost is made with material such as leaves, shredded twigs, and kitchen scraps from plants.

To gardeners, compost is considered "black gold" because of its many benefits in the garden.

Cold composting is as simple as collecting yard waste or taking out the organic materials in your trash (such as fruit and vegetable peels, coffee grounds and filters, and eggshells) and then corralling them in a pile or bin.

Over the course of a year or so, the material will decompose.

The key difference between manure and compost is that manure is feces (sometimes urine) sourced as a byproduct from raising animals, while compost is organic matter that's undergone a natural decomposition process.

Both provide nutrient content for plants, but they may be used for different reasons.

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