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Old 24-05-2012, 07:16 PM
BlackThumb BlackThumb is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2012
Location: England
Posts: 38
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Quote:
Originally Posted by allen73 View Post
Getting the right mixture of brown (carbon) materials, to green (nitrogeneous) materials will make a huge difference. Adding too much brown material will result in a compost pile that takes a long time to break down. Adding too much green material will result in a compost pile that is slimy and smelly that doesn't break down well. In order for your compost pile to break down quickly and efficiently you should feed it just the right balance of brown and green materials.

The microorganisms in our compost bins need both carbon and nitrogen to thrive; carbon for energy and nitrogen for protein synthesis. For every one unit of nitrogen used by the bacteria they also consume about 30 units of carbon. So in order to keep the bacteria working efficiently we need to supply them with a mixture that is about 30 parts carbon to 1 part nitrogen. Needless to say, most materials don't have a ratio of 30:1. However, if we know the approximate C:N ratio of the materials we use in our compost, we can combine them so that the total mix will be close to 30:1.
Thank you for your reply. I would like to have a compost bin, but there isn't any more room for one. I was wondering if it were possible to reuse soil without mixing it with compost.