COMPOSTING FOR CONGREGATIONS - Johns Hopkins

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The Baltimore Food and Faith Project of the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future

COMPOSTING FOR
CONGREGATIONS
What is compost? Compost is a dark, crumbly, earth-smelling
material produced by the natural decomposition of leaves, grass clip-
pings, and many other organic materials. It is much like the organic
matter existing on top of and in all soil and can be made by just
about anyone (University of Maryland Master Gardener Handbook,
http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/swfa/ 2008).
compost/docs/CompostLogo2.jpg

Everyone should make compost!!


♦ It reduces the amount of material going to landfills. Municipal waste is composed of 13%
yard wastes, 12% food wastes, and 34% paper, most of which can be composted (U.S. EPA,
Office of Solid Waste, 2005). Disposing of yard wastes in landfills is expensive and damaging
to the climate. When organic debris decays in landfills, it releases a lot of methane, a potent
greenhouse gas that is 23 times more heat trapping than carbon dioxide. Also, burning
organic materials uses up fossil fuels and releases other harmful pollutants (University of
Maryland Master Gardener Handbook, 2008).

♦ Composting saves money! It is a valuable and free soil amendment that improves soil
structure, aeration, and water-holding capacity (University of MD Master Gardener Handook,
2008). Many gardeners who use compost never buy commercially-produced fertilizer again.

♦ Compost suppresses some soil-borne diseases. Some microbes in compost may out-
compete pathogens for food and habitat while others may attack or repel plant pathogens
(University of Maryland master Gardner Handbook, 2008).

Why should faith communities compost?


♦ To respect the cycle of life —when we use leaves, grass
clippings, food scraps, and other organic matter to create
compost rather than sending these things to the dump, we
help nurture our soil, grow healthier foods and plants, and
show our love for creation through our mindful caretaking of
the earth. We also leave a more livable planet for our
children when we choose to use compost instead of
synthetic fertilizers which are often made from fossil fuels.

♦ To promote social justice—the things we throw away


usually end up in landfills or incinerators, next to which
people often live. These facilities are frequently built in
places where the disenfranchised among us dwell—the poor
and people of color. Composting to reduce our own contribution to
this waste stream helps reduce the burden of living near landfills
and incinerators that release pollution and toxins into the air
and water for those who are often the most vulnerable among us.
How to Compost:
Where should we locate our composting system?
♦ On a level spot in the garden, so nutrients from the compost won’t leach away in
water runoff.
♦ Near where the raw material will be generated and the end product will be used.
♦ Away from wooden buildings to avoid attracting termites.
♦ Away from trees and shrubs which will send their roots into the pile.
♦ Near a source of water.
♦ Where you have sufficient room to stockpile ingredients, turn the pile, and store
finished compost.
♦ A site in the full sun isn’t necessary as the decomposition process is driven by
the microbes, not the sun. You can choose to place your compost pile in full sun
or shade, depending on what best suits your needs.

What tools will we need?


The answer to this question will depend on what and how much you’re composting.
Pruning shears, string trimmers, lawn mowers, machetes, and hatchets are ade-
quate to cut up most yard waste. Always use good safety practices, no matter
which tools you use. An easy way to shred fallen leaves (shredding them increases
the surface area available to the microbes and helps to speed up decomposition) is
to mow them before raking and collect the shredded leaves directly with a lawn
mower attachment. If you don’t have a mower mage, just rake the leaves to the
compost area and run your lawn mower through them with the discharge shoot di-
rected toward the pile.

What kind of compost pile or bin should


we use?
The ideal size for a compost bin is 3’ by 3’
by 3’. You can construct a three-bin
composting system, have just one pile that
you work with, or purchase any number of
commercially-available bins and tumblers.
Before buying a bin, ask the following:
• Can it handle our volume of
waste? Three-bin composting system.
• Is it attractive and non-obtrusive?
• Is it rodent-proof? Can you use it for food scraps?
• Is it durable?
• Can you easily turn the ingredients and remove the finished compost?

For a comparison of different types of composters, visit:


http://www.hgic.umd.edu/_media/documents/hg35_002.pdf

(Information on this page taken from the University of Maryland Master Gardener Handbook, 2008)
Building the Pile!
There are several different ways to make compost. The most important aspect of composting is to
ensure the correct ratio of brown materials to green materials go into the pile.

Brown materials include fallen leaves, straw, wood chips, paper, and sawdust.
Green materials include fresh grass clippings, kitchen scraps, and coffee grounds.

The correct ratio is attained when the weight of the browns and greens are about equal.

Here are a few composting methods that we think are easiest and most effective:

Cool / Passive Composting is not labor intensive, but requires patience. Simply add the
right ratio of browns and greens to a pile sized 3’ by 3’ by 3’ and let it set, turning it
once or twice a year to speed up the process and create a more uniform product.
If you constantly add fresh materials to your pile, the materials on top of the pile will be in
the early stages of decomposition when the material at the bottom is ready to use.
Remove the top of the pile and harvest the compost at the bottom annually, or start a
new pile when the first pile is full.

Hot / Active Composting produces a compost harvest in just 6 to 8 weeks but requires
more careful attention and periodic labor. Fill a bin or pile all at one time with the necessary
ingredients, and do not add more raw materials later. A 3’x3’x3’ heap involves a broad
range of microorganisms and generates significant heat. Once triggered into action
and provided with the appropriate mixture of browns and greens, water, and air, the heat
loving bacteria will generate temperatures of 130-170° F. The temperature will typically rise
within 24 hours after the bin is filled. As the bacteria consume nutrients and oxygen, they
produce enough heat to evaporate some of the moisture. The temperature will decrease as
they begin to die. Before the temperature drops below 100° F., turn the materials so that
fresh materials, air and, if necessary, water are available at the core of the bin.

Continue checking the temperature, turning, adding moisture, etc., until the volume of the
material is about 50% of the original. The temperature will not rise again. The compost
should be dark brown and should not resemble the original materials. Let the pile sit for two
weeks, allowing it to cure and stabilize the nutrients.

Trench Composting offers the small-plot vegetable gardener an opportunity to improve


the soil continuously. After fall harvest, dig a trench in the walking or gardening space,
about 8 to 12 inches deep. Begin burying your kitchen waste and other raw organic
materials in the trench, covering the material as you go with chopped leaves, grass
clippings, straw or soil. Each year or season, you can alternate the location of trenches.
You can bury a broad range of organic materials without the fear of attracting
animals or creating bad odors. Plus, you can continue to compost all winter!

(Information on this page taken from the University of Maryland Home and Garden Information Center, Backyard
Composting Publication, http://www.hgic.umd.edu/_media/documents/hg35_002.pdf.)
What to Compost!

Goodies—These can be added to the pile…

Spoiled vegetables and fruits; Peels, cores, seeds, stems; Rinds; Pits
Coffee grounds, coffee filter papers, tea bags, and tea leaves
Egg shells
Bread
Corn cobs and husks
Paper
Evergreen needles
Dead flowers and spent plants
Leaves
Grass clippings, but must be mixed into compost pile
Weeds (no flowers or seeds)

Baddies—These should not be added to the pile…

Milk, butter, cheese, sour cream, and yogurt


Cat and dog manure
Chicken and other meats
Mayonnaise
Bones
Salad dressing
Vegetable oil and grease or lard
Cooked foods
Peanut butter
Glossy magazines

(Information on this page taken from the University of Maryland Master Gardener Handbook, 2008)
Ideas for Congregational
Composting Projects:
♦ Mulch! Use your yard clippings and fallen leaves as mulch around trees and flower
beds on congregational grounds. This saves money and helps to return valuable nutri-
ents to the soil.

♦ Donate the best, compost the rest! Many soup kitchens and food pantries are
happy to accept food that faith communities don’t use. Donate any good leftover foods
to them, and put the rest in your compost pile.

♦ Coffee grounds galore! Pretty much all


congregations have some sort of coffee hour
at least once a week, resulting in a whole lot of
coffee grounds with usually no where good to
go but the garbage can. Have no fear! Coffee
grounds are an excellent addition to any com-
post heap, and can even be sprinkled under
acid-loving plants like azaleas and blueberries
to help them stay happy.

♦ Celebrate Earth Day with a Crazy Cool


Compost Saturday or Sunday. Adults and
children can learn how composting helps to protect our planet by reducing air pollu-
tion, greenhouse gas emissions, and fossil fuel usage. They can then get their hands
dirty by building a bin, adding some scraps, and getting their first compost going.

♦ Teach kids in religious education about why composting is good for the earth and peo-
ple, and then teach them how much fun it is by getting a three-foot diameter Roly
Poly Compost Ball in which one can place compostable materials. Children can take
turns rolling the ball across the yard each week, watching as the organic materials in-
side slowly turn to compost. Children and youth might also designed to mix composta-
ble items together as it is rolled across a yard. For even more fun and to further the
lesson, set up some garbage can “pins” that can be bowled down by the compost ball.

♦ The Compost Constable is in Town! Encourage members of the congregation to


bring their leftover kitchen scraps in a clear plastic bag each week to your church/
synagogue/mosque. Designate a Compost Constable to look at each bag of compost
to make sure it contains only goodies for the pile, and then dump it into the compost
bin. Bring the bag home to wash and reuse the next week.

♦ For the very ambitious, start a Community Composting Project. Recruit volunteers
to go around to area residents and local restaurants to pick up buckets of kitchen
scraps, bring them to the composting site, dump the buckets, clean them, and return
them to the residents and restaurants for use the next week. Use the finished compost
to help create vegetable gardens and beautify your community.
Selected Faith-Based
Composting Resources:

Earth Ministry Recycling & Composting (http://www.earthministry.org/take-action/lifestlye-


choices/recycling-composting) has a short list of ways to that congregations can recycle and
compost as part of their larger list of Sustainable Lifestyle Choices.

Greenfaith Waste Audit (http://www.greenfaith.org/stewardship/waste.html) provides waste


audit tools to congregations that allow them to conduct waste audits in order to identify what
sorts of and how much waste they generate, so as to better reduce the amount of garbage
generated, create a recycling program, etc. There is nothing specific included about compost-
ing, but in doing the audit a congregation will likely see how much waste is food scraps that
could be composted.

Interfaith Power and Light's Cool Congregations Program


(http://www.coolcongregations.com/) has an on-line calculator to help
congregations measure their carbon footprint, and identify the best
places to become more energy smart. Faith communities (and house-
holds) can find out how much waste they're sending to landfills and
what percentage of their total energy use comes from waste emissions.
(See also http://www.emoregon.org/pdfs/OIPL
IPL_Cool_Congregations_Carbon_Checklist_and_Action_Menu-- http://www.fbes.org/images/main%
Do_it_yourself.pdf) 20page%20images%20355%
20x279/compost.jpg

Unitarian Universalist Ethical Eating, Food and Environmental Justice Resource Guide
(http://www.uua.org/documents/washingtonoffice/ethicaleating/influencing.doc) contains all
sorts of ideas about how to eat in more environmentally-friendly and just ways, including
starting a compost pile (end of page 2).

Web of Creation Environmental Guide: Buildings, Grounds, and Practices


(http://www.webofcreation.org/environmental%20guide.pdf). This comprehensive (and
lengthy!) document covers a wide variety of ways that congregations can green their facilities
and grounds. Search for "compost" to find the different areas throughout the document that
mention ideas for when and how to compost. Please note, though, that the suggestion to
compost your pet waste shouldn't be followed as it smells bad and can spread diseases to the
garden.

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