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Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil Fertility Cynthia Sandberg Love Apple Farms www.LoveAppleFarms.com

Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

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Page 1: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil Fertility

Cynthia Sandberg Love Apple Farms

www.LoveAppleFarms.com

Page 2: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Please keep your talking to a minimum, allowing you and your neighbors to get the full value of the class. What this class doesn't cover:● Growing tomatoes, vegetables, and perennials● Every possible soil amendment● Every possible method of composting

BUT WE LEARN LOTS ABOUT COMPOST AND WORMS!

Class Introduction

Page 3: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

It's All About the Soil

● Increase yields● Decrease pests and diseases● Increase nutritional value of crops● Improve flavor● Reduce erosion of topsoil● Conserve water

Page 4: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Macronutrients

●Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium (NPK) ●Needed in larger quantities by plants

Page 5: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Micronutrients● Calcium (Ca), Magnesium (Mg), Molybdenum (Mo),

Boron (B), Copper (Cu), Manganese (Mn), Zinc (Zn), Chlorine (Cl), Iron (Fe), Nickel (Ni)

● Needed in trace quantities, too much can hurt plants more

than it can help ● Regular additions of organic

matter essential

Page 6: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Soil pH

●Test your soil!●Rainfall increases soil acidity ●Add lime to raise pH●Add sulfur to lower pH

Page 7: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Importance of Soil pH

●Most vegetables want a pH between 5 and 7

●6.5 is a great pH for an all-purpose veggie garden

●Your pH could be way off●Plants cannot uptake nutrients

when pH is skewed

Page 8: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil
Page 9: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Soil FertilityDON'TS

●Rototilling ●Fallow land ●Chemical fertilizers,

fungicides, pesticides (organic ok)

●Soil Compaction

DO'S

●Double-digging ●Cover cropping ●Organic amendments ●Compost!!!

Page 10: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Double-Digging Technique

Page 11: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Incorporate Compost & Dry Fertilizer While Double Digging

Page 12: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Organic Amendments

●Feed your soil like you feed your body●Cannot "Miracle Gro" soil into good health●Vegetables are fast-growing plants●Need more fertilizer than perennials because you

are harvesting (taking away nutrients)●Always amend beds before planting ●Soil test will reveal deficiencies and make amendment recommendations X

Page 13: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Bed Amending Recipe

For a 50 square foot bed:● 1 wheel barrow homemade compost

OR 1 bag Gardner & Bloome Harvest Supreme

● 2 quarts G&B 4-6-3 Tomato, Veg, & Herb Fertilizer

● 1 quart pure Worm Castings● 1 pound Mustard Meal

Page 14: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Bed Amending Step by Step If Your Bed is Already Double Dug

●Sprinkle all amendments evenly on

top ●Turn over soil as deep as you can

using a spade fork

●Rake smooth

Page 15: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Cover Crops

Page 16: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Cover Cropping Basics● Cover cropping aka “green manure” improves soil● Adds fertility● Prevent erosion from wind and rain● Produces and maintains top soil● When you have nothing growing in the bed (such as in the

winter time), put in a cover crop (maintains a “living soil”)

● Good cover crops: mustards, vetch, fava beans, bell beans, rye or a mix

● 4-6 weeks before planting vegetables, cut it down to the base, compost tops, and turn soil over, putting the tops upside down with roots exposed (or if able, break up clods after turning over)

Page 17: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Composting

Definition: The controlled aerobic decomposition of biodegradable organic matter, producing compost.

Page 18: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Pallet-Sided compost bin

● Pallets are cheap and easy to find● Wire together, then unwire to turn or use compost

Page 19: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Three-bin Compost System

● Easy DIY project made of lumber, wire mesh and corrugated metal top

● 2x6 lumber slats fit into grooves on 4x4 posts● Add or remove 2x6s as pile increases and decreases in size● Turn first pile into second and third bins to aid in decomposition

Page 20: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Compost Tumblers

● Promise to give you finished compost in 2 weeks

● Don’t live up to that promise w/o a lot of work

● Don’t get benefit of worms moving into compost as it finishes decomposing

● Don’t waste your money

Page 21: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Free-Form Compost Pile

● Easiest one to build● Be careful of N and C

ratios● Don’t let it get too wet in

winter● Don’t let it dry out in

summer● Only works if varmints

can’t get into it and scatter it everywhere

Page 22: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Building a Compost Pile

● Start with 6" layer of sticks and/or stalks criss-crossed○ Use twigs, sunflower stalks, corn stalks

● Add a 2" layer of "green" matter (nitrogen)● Add a 3" layer of "brown" matter (carbon)● Water lightly● Another 2" layer of "green" matter● Another 3" layer of "brown" matter● Water lightly● And so on and so on...

If you build large enough pile all in one day, it should exceed 130 degrees Fahrenheit for 3 days, then cool down.

Page 23: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Homeowner Method - Bit by Bit

If you're not building complete pile from scratch: ●Add your buckets from under your sink one by one.●Ensure there is enough carbon in your bucket.●Carbon can be paper towels, napkins, Kleenex,

coffee filters, tea bags, torn up newspaper, junk mail, paper shredder refuse, etc.

Caveat: If not enough carbon, pile will putrefy

Page 24: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

"Green" Matter: High Nitrogen Content● Kitchen scraps*● Garden scraps*● Grass clippings● Coffee grounds ● Yard trimmings* ● Green leaves ● Most weeds● Animal manure (vegetarians

only)

*Cut up into smaller pieces More surface area = faster decomposition

Page 25: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

"Brown" Matter: High Carbon Content● Animal bedding

(shavings, straw)● Cardboard● Paper● Coffee filters and tea

bags● Cotton rags and balls● Dryer and vacuum

cleaner lint● Eggshells

● Fireplace ashes ● Hair and fur● Hay and Straw● Dried leaves ● Nut shells● Sawdust● Newspaper● Wood chips● Wool rags

Page 26: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

What Not to Compost● Black walnut tree leaves or twigs● Oak leaves and pine needles ● Coal or charcoal ashes● Dairy products● Diseased or insect-ridden plants● Fats, grease, lard, or oils● Cooked meat or bones● Pet wastes● Yard trimmings treated with chemical pesticides

Page 27: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Now let's go outside and build a compost pile!

Page 28: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Vermiculture (Cold Composting)

●Can be done outdoors and indoors, even in apartments!

●Rich soil conditioner ●Worm casting tea:

our favorite fertilizer!

Page 29: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

The Container: Store-Bought Examples

Page 30: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

The Container: Home-made Examples

Page 31: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Drainage Holes

●Drill holes in bottom for drainage and sides for ventilation..

●Place tray underneath to capture excess liquid (use as plant fertilizer).

Page 32: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Cover Bins●Retains moisture.●Provides darkness for worms.● If indoors: burlap sack or sheet of dark plastic.● If outdoors: solid lid to keep out unwanted

scavengers and rain.

Page 33: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Bedding for Inside Bin

● Necessary to provide damp bedding for worms to live in.● Shredded newspaper, cardboard, dry leaves, chopped up

straw, compost, sawdust.● Vary to provide more nutrients and create richer compost.● Add a few handfuls of sand or soil - necessary grit for

worm's digestion.● Wet as a wrung-out

sponge.● Fluff up to provide

air spaces.

Page 34: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Compost Worms: RedwormsEisenia foetida● Aka red wiggler, brandling, manure worm● Live at or near surface

Lumbricus rubellus ● Aka driftworm, garden worm, angle worm, leaf worm, red march

worm, red wriggler● Live further down

Do not use dew-worms (found in soil)--they will not survive

Page 35: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Worm Bin Location● Indoor all year round

○ Basements are great● Outdoor during milder climates

○ Sheds, garages, patios, balconies, in yard● Temperature range: 40 - 80°F

○ If < 40°F: move indoors or insulate well● Out of hot sun and heavy rain

Page 36: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Feeding Your Worms

DO's

●Fruit and vegetable scraps, chopped up

●Pulverized egg shells●Tea bags, coffee

grounds, filters

DON'Ts

●Meat●Dairy●Oily foods●Grains●Citrus ●Onions

Page 37: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Food/Worm Ratio

1 lb food waste every week to start

1/2 lb worms (roughly 500)

:

● If starting with less worms, reduce food accordingly

● Worm population will steadily increase over time

● Then you can start adding more proportionately

Page 38: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Maintaining Your Bin

●Add food for 3 months - little or no bedding should remain○Castings will be dark brown○Contents will decrease in bulk

●Harvest castings when your bin is AT LEAST half full

Page 39: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Harvesting your Castings

● Worms move up into food, leaving castings behind● To harvest, remove top half of what is in the bin, which holds

the worms● Remove the top half to a tarp or box or bin● Take away bottom half of bin (these are your usable castings)● Add a couple of inches of new bedding on the bottom of the

bin: shredded newspapers, shavings, dried leaves, compost. Add water to the bedding. It can’t be dry!

● Add back the removed top half.● Store castings in a bucket or plastic ziplock until ready to use.

Do not store in heat or sunlight.

Page 40: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Worm Cocoons

Page 41: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Problem: Worms Crawling to Sides and LidWorms will crawl when disturbed or when first placed in new bin. If they are crawling to sides or lid at other times, then bedding may be too acid if you add a lot of acidic foods. Solution: ● Add a couple handfuls of dolomitic lime and cut down on

acidic wastesWorms may otherwise be unhappy: too hot, too cold, too wet. Analyze what may be the problem and react accordingly

Page 42: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Problem: Unpleasant, strong odors

From overloading food waste that sits around too long. This is a photo of what bin should NOT look like! Solution: ● Stop adding food waste● Gently stir contents to

allow more air in● Check drainage holes for

blockage, and drill more holes if necessary

Page 43: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Problem: Fruit Flies

Solution:● Bury food waste in bedding a bit and don't overload● Keep bin covered ● Move bin to new location

Page 44: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Worm Casting Tea● Big handful of castings in a 5 gallon bucket● Let sit for two days● Can then be diluted with another 4 parts water ● Strain through cheesecloth or FRC or strainer and apply to plants

with a watering can or garden sprayer● Do twice a month during growing season● Increase fertility, reduce incidence of disease, and reduce bug

stress

Page 45: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Available in our Sales Tent Today

● Worm castings to get you started on fertility program

● G&B Harvest Supreme● G&B 4-6-3 Tomato, Veg & Herb Fertilizer● G&B Liquid All-Purpose Fertilizer● Fan Nozzles for garden hoses● Jams & Pickles

Page 47: Fertility Compost, Vermiculture, & Soil

Final WordOn Worms

●Creates responsibility.

●Living creatures with unique needs.

●Create and maintain a healthy habitat.

●Your worms and your garden will thrive!