Is your landscape
suffering from drought, weeds, insects or disease?
‘Mature’ organic
compost is a natural and simple choice for solving those problems. An
application of ‘mature’ compost, along with periodic applications of compost
tea, will improve the overall health & vigor of your landscape. It will also
lower your overall maintenance & water requirements for the summer &
thereafter.
Why use compost?
It’s simply the
most natural choice available. Mature compost is safe for you and your family.
It contains nothing unnatural or poisonous. Your garden & lawn will be safe
for you, your children and your pets to use during and immediately after
application. Compost improves your lawn & gardens’ drought tolerance and
reduces watering requirements by improving the plant’s root systems and the
soils’ ability to retain water.
Mature compost can
safely be applied around pools and applied directly into ponds, streams and
rivers without risk to the environment. It also promotes & creates an
environment in which birds & butterflies thrive. Your lawn & garden will
have fewer weeds, insect pests or diseases. Compost allows the soil to gain
strength naturally and the plants grown it will naturally thrive. Compost gives
you healthier and more attractive soil, grass, trees & plants. You will need
no synthetic chemical fertilizers or poisons. Compost is simply good for your
family, lawn, & gardens.
Can using compost
save me time, money & labor?
Yes! You will no
longer need to bag the grass clippings or to remove thatch as compost aids in
their rapid assimilation. The compost will also reduce the amount of water
needed. Compost improves the heat and drought tolerance of your lawn &
garden thus decreasing loss and replacement costs. Healthy plants simply require
less maintenance. These facts alone save you much time, money and labor!
Does compost
improve the heat and drought tolerance of my plants?
Yes! The organic
materials in compost, in conjunction with the rhizobacteria and rhizofungi,
naturally loosen and aerate the soil. This allows greater water & root
penetration. The same combination works together to encapsulate and hold
moisture in the soil by creating soil aggregates. Soil aggregates are a
naturally occurring microcosmic system that rhizobacteria & rhizofungi
produces in order to keep themselves from drying up and dying. The plant roots
grow into these aggregates and are provided a natural reserve of nutrients and
water that otherwise would have dissipated from the soil.
What is compost?
According to
Webster’s dictionary “a mixture that consists largely of decayed organic matter
and is used for fertilizing and conditioning land.” Properly composted material
is heated by the decomposition process and does not have any weed seeds, nor,
will it burn your plants as chemical fertilizers do.
Does compost smell
bad?
No! not if it’s
fully ‘matured’. We advise that you only use fully composted material. Fully
composted, organic material smells like rich organic garden soil. If it smells
like anything else, do not use it, as it is not mature and can cause harm to
your lawn & garden. Not all ‘composts’ are created equally and we suggest
that you fully investigate the source of the supplier. Truly mature, “organic”,
compost is totally safe & nontoxic to your family and the soil in which the
plants grow. For more information in regards to this topic please visit:
http://www.mygreennetwork.com/index.php?pr=Bio_Solids
What is Compost
Tea?
A simple definition
of compost tea is that it is a water extract of organic compost that is brewed
in a similar way that your morning tea is made. It contains natural soluble
nutrients and a great diversity of beneficial, bacteria, fungi, protozoa and
nematodes. It is a totally organic, living, synergistic microcosm
that introduces renewed life to the soil and plants. From our many years of
experience we’ve found that compost tea supercharges new compost applications.
How does
compost/tea help to suppress disease causing bacteria and fungi?
The rhizobacteria
(good bacteria) controls the growth of the "bad" bacteria by keeping the soil
aerobic so that the “bad” bacteria cannot live & prosper. Likewise the
“good” fungi compete with the “bad” fungi and keep them under control as well.
Healthy soil makes for healthy plants in the same way that healthy food makes
for healthy people and animals.
What do beneficial
bacteria do for plants?
Beneficial bacteria
make essential soil mineral elements available to the plant by decomposing
organic matter and improving the physical properties of the soil. Trees, flowers
and lawns that have an abundance of rhizobacteria live longer, need little to no
chemical treatment, as they suffer from very few disease problems.
How does
compost/tea reduce thatch?
“Thatch” is simply
a layer of dead un-decayed plant material. The rhizobacteria breaks down the
thatch into organic humus that is then reintroduced naturally into the soil to
feed the grass.
Why not use
chemical fertilizers?
Synthetic
chemicals sterilize the soil and make more and more applications of chemicals
absolutely necessary. This is like putting your plants on continuous life
support. They may stay barely alive, but they will never thrive. Your lawn &
garden will suffer from continuous problems which will require more water,
fungicides, herbicides, insecticides & ever greater amounts of fertilizer.
It’s very important that you don’t use synthetic chemicals on your lawn or
garden.
What about weeds?
Long term use of
compost and compost tea while avoiding chemical fertilizers can prevent weeds
naturally. According to Dr. Ingham of Soil Foodweb Inc.: "Weeds all require high
levels of nitrates, so nitrogen fertilizer actually selects for weeds, If you
drop your nitrates to less than 10 ppm, the weeds leave. When you have
mycorrhizal fungi directly feeding plants, you can drop soil nitrate levels
below that threshold level and thistle, johnson grass, and nightshade all
disappear. If you have good calcium levels, you decrease the composites, because
they can't tolerate calcium. Next time you want to get rid of crabgrass, mix egg
shells into the ground.” Reprinted from the Maine Organic Farmer and Gardener.
Dr. Ingham Puts Soil Life to Work - Maine
Organic Farmer '99
We also recommend
periodic Corn Gluten meal applications. Corn gluten meal is a useful, natural,
pre-emergent pesticide that works very well in controlling weeds and greatly
compliments the usage of compost and compost tea.
What about insects?
Any naturally
healthy environment has a great need of bio-diversity. Chemically treated
gardens create an unnatural and imbalanced state. Using compost and compost tea
instead of chemicals promotes natural bio-diversity and a subsequent growth of
beneficial insect populations. The beneficial insects prey upon the harmful
pests & naturally keep them from overwhelming the garden ecology. In urban
settings, it’s often necessary to reintroduce beneficial insects into your lawn
& garden from outside sources.
How long will it
take to see results?
You can see results
within two weeks after the first application of compost. Using a combination of
compost & compost tea, we have seen results in as soon as four seven days
during the growing season. Your lawn & garden will continue to improve each
day thereafter as the soil becomes more alive. Even greater improvement will be
noticed with additional compost and compost tea applications.
Content provided
by Conrad Cain
President of
http://www.homegardendesign.com">
Home & Garden Design, Inc.
Home & Garden Design supplies residential landscape
design and installation and promotes naturally organic, lawn and garden
reclamation in the Atlanta
Georgia area. In
conjunction with his life partner Danna Cain, ASLA landscape Architect, they
have more than 50 years experience in the Green Industry. Their mutual creations
have been featured in national & regional magazines, local garden tours and
numerous feature articles.