Hi, I am Ed Bruske with D.C. Urban Gardeners here in my garden in the District of Columbia. We’re talking about composting and some of you may be thinking taking all those scraps, grass clippings, leaves, kitchen scraps, food and trying to compost it out here and the neighbors are not going to like that. Smells, pests, raccoons, rats, that's never going to happen, not here in my neighborhood.
Well, it doesn't have to be that way at all. Maybe when you’ve been in the country and passed a farm where the soil was newly tilled and you took a good whiff of that and thought that’s the smell of the good earth. Well, this is my compost and it smells just like that. The reason is that there are certain bacteria, good bacteria that give off that good earth smell and those are the kind of bacteria you want to keep in your compost pile and the way you do that is by keeping a right balance of materials, nitrogen to carbon, grass clippings to leaves, to kitchen scraps and also making sure that your pile gets oxygen by turning it. That’s one way to keep smells from happening.
The bad smells that you associate with garbage come from a different kind of bacteria. They’re the kind of bacteria that don’t like oxygen, they’re called anaerobic bacteria. They’re the one that make those really putrid, awful, garbage smells and we’re not going to have any of those in our compost pile. Another way you can keep out pests such as raccoons or rats or whatever it might be, is having a totally enclosed compost bin. That would be not one like this with loose wire mesh or an open top like this, but something that is built totally enclosed out of wood, fine wire mesh or perhaps a manufactured compost device that’s enclosed and designed to keep pests out. We’ll be talking about that a little later. The next thing we want to talk about is the tools that we need for compost.
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