Organic Composting at Home

Organic Compost: Toxins vs. Toxicants.


    According to the latest news from San Francisco, 20 tons of free bags labeled "organic biosolids compost" actually contained sewage sludge from nine California counties. Sewage sludge is the end product of the treatment process for any human waste, hospital waste, industrial waste and storm water that goes down the drain. That highly concentrated toxic sludge contains anything that went down the drain but did not break down during the treatment process. This usually includes a number of heavy metals, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, pharmaceuticals, steroids, flame-retardants, bacteria (including antibiotic-resistant bacteria), fungi, parasites, and viruses.

    Compost is a common name for humus, which is the result of the decomposition of organic matter. The most effective decomposers are bacteria and other microorganisms,such as fungi, molds, protozoa, and actinomycetes.
Some of them are harmless to animals and higher plants; others are dangerous disease-causing agents.


   Toxins in organic compost are natural products of living cells. They can't be avoided. It's not in a human power. We are protected from disease by our immune system. And  At a macroscopic level, earthworms, ants, snails, slugs, millipedes, sow bugs, spring-tails, and others work on consuming and breaking down the organic matter. When the natural composting process occurs, all components of the system work together and cooperate. By adding some ingredients and conditions to this natural system humans interrupt the balance. It causes the confinement of toxic byproducts, which we call toxicants. By contributing some toxic ingredients into composting process we multiply poisonous substances to the unknown extend.
We should be very conscious about such kind of experiments, as nature always gives us the best lesson.

Organic Composting at home

     Composting is the controlled decomposition of organic matter. Rather than allowing nature to take its slow course, a composer provides an optimal environment in which decomposers can thrive. To encourage the most active microbes, the compost pile needs the proper mix of the following ingredients and conditions:


  • Carbon
  • Nitrogen
  • Oxygen (air)
  • Water

    Very important element of proper decomposition is a right proportion of ingredients. In other words, the ingredients placed in the pile should contain 30 times as much carbon as nitrogen. High-carbon sources provide the cellulose needed by the composting bacteria for conversion to sugars and heat. High-nitrogen sources provide the most concentrated protein. These sources allow the compost bacteria to thrive.

    Compost breaks down with special conditions, such as oxygen and water. It is very important to turn the compost pile every week, so it doesn’t release methane gas. Landfills are highly compacted so everything there breaks down in an anaerobic environment, and consequently provides thriving condition for toxic actinomycetes. A byproduct of dry decomposition is methane gas, a sad addition to global warming problem.

    Organic composting at home was initiated as a very beneficial idea, which can help reduce household waste by up to 30%. Organic composting at home results in reduced garbage disposal fees, less waste going into landfills, and the immense satisfaction of producing a useful soil additive for household lawn and garden needs.

    Organic composting at home is not so complicated and easy to implement, but people need to learn how to do it properly; otherwise the good idea loses all pros and becomes nothing more then a new way of introducing more toxicants to the environment.
The major mistakes people do are not following the right proportion of all necessary ingredients, preventing the pile from the oxygen it truly needed, and keeping it too dry,ended up decomposing in a very non-beneficial way, and producing an odor so foul that government agents and neighbors knocking at their door.

    The truth is that natural organic process should follow natural laws. Forcing it to work in a wrong direction will not bring any benefits. In fact, it will stimulate various organic organisms to grow and develop their byproducts,  that eventually will be mixed with the soil. It is what we call toxicants.
    Our organic gardens are our food supply, but they also a play area and learning environment for kids and pets. It is why we need to learn organic composting at home from experts.

 We recommend an effective tutorial available for download to learn from expert.




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