How to make compost

PVC Fishing Jug Diagram

 

 

Compost will not necessarily replace the pricy NPK-based commercial fertilizers (nitrogen, phosphorous and potash), but it can reduce the amount you have to purchase.

The high cost of petroleum has made the cost of fertilizer jump as well. When faced with the soaring cost of fertilizer, many food plotters will often cut back or eliminate fertilizer from their budgets — a mistake that leads to regret in the fall when food plots falter and a great deal of spring and summer effort goes to waste.

Rotating nitrogen-fixing legumes like clover into a food plot can alleviate some of the fertilizer issues. Another option is adding compost to the soil, which enhances soil quality, adds beneficial bacteria and contributes missing nutrients that legumes do not produce. It aerates the soil, increases soil moisture and gives young plants a boost of micronutrients.

Compost will not necessarily replace the pricy NPK-based commercial fertilizers (nitrogen, phosphorous and potash), but it can reduce the amount you have to purchase.
Best of all, it’s, for the most part, free.

Getting good compost

Follow these guidelines when creating your own compost to enrich small food plots:

A natural process

Once the biological process ramps up, the pile will generate heat. If it starts to smell funny, add more brown material, turn the material over more often and cut back on the water or wet materials (green). An active compost pile can create a rich-black/brown material in as few as two to three weeks. — P.J. Perea

From homemade Ghillie suits to portable deer stands, find out how to do it all from scratch with our DIY outdoor projects.

PVC Fishing Jugs
PVC Canoe/Kayak Cart
Turkey Tote and Spur Shield
Office Camera Clip
Ghillie Suit
LED light
Wall-mounted bat house
One-board bluebird house
PVC canoe cart
Hunting Blind
Tube call
Deer skinning trough
Wood duck box
C
alibrating sprayers
PVC target stand

Portable box stand