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Composting Portland OR

Natural composting, or biological decomposition, began with the first plants on earth and has been going on ever since. As vegetation falls to the ground, it slowly decays, providing minerals and nutrients needed for plants, animals, and microorganisms.

Plan-it Earth Design
(503) 239-0105
1725 SE 34th Ave
Portland, OR
Natives
503-367-8150
4305 Se 31st Ave
Portland, OR
Hands On Gardens, LLC
(503) 334-7491
Northeast
Portland, OR
Lake Grove Garden Center
(503)-636-2414
15955 Boones Ferry Road
Lake Oswego, OR
The Gardener's Choice Inc.
(503)-684-2727
14240 SW Pacific Hwy
Tigard, OR
Cornell Farm
(503)-292-9895
8212 SW Barnes Road
Portland, OR
Tryon Creek Nursery
503-244-8884
10400 Sw Boones Ferry Rd
Portland, OR
Drake's 7 Dees Garden Center
(503)-256-2223
16519 SE Stark Street
Portland, OR
Shorty's Nursery Inc
(360)-882-0699
10006 SE Mill Plain Blvd
Vancouver, WA
Cascade Greenhouse
360-892-9494
2201 NE 112th Ave
Vancouver, WA
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Composting

Article

Composting for a Healthier Home

By EPA

Compost is organic material that can be used as a soil amendment or as a medium to grow plants. Mature compost is a stable material with a content called humus that is dark brown or black and has a soil-like, earthy smell. It is created by: combining organic wastes (e.g., yard trimmings, food wastes, manures) in proper ratios into piles, rows, or vessels; adding bulking agents (e.g., wood chips) as necessary to accelerate the breakdown of organic materials; and allowing the finished material to fully stabilize and mature through a curing process.

Natural composting, or biological decomposition, began with the first plants on earth and has been going on ever since. As vegetation falls to the ground, it slowly decays, providing minerals and nutrients needed for plants, animals, and microorganisms. Mature compost, however, includes the production of high temperatures to destroy pathogens and many weed seeds that natural decomposition does not destroy.

Environmental Benefits

Compost use can produce a variety of environmental benefits. The following are a few of the most important ones:

Composting Can:

  • Suppress plant diseases and pests.
  • Reduce or eliminate the need for chemical fertilizers.
  • Promote higher yields of agricultural crops.
  • Facilitate reforestation, wetlands restoration, and habitat revitalization efforts by amending contaminated, compacted, and marginal soils.
  • Cost-effectively remediate soils contaminated by hazardous waste.
  • Remove solids, oil, grease, and heavy metals from stormwater runoff.
  • Capture and destroy 99.6 percent of industrial volatile organic chemicals (VOCs).
  • Provide cost savings of at least 50 percent over conventional soil, water , and air pollution remediation technologies, where applicable.

Compost enriches soils


Compost has the ability to help regenerate poor soils. The composting process encourages the production of beneficial micro-organisms (mainly bacteria and fungi) which in turn break down organic matter to create humus. Humus - a rich nutrient-filled material - increases the nutrient content in soils and helps soils retain moisture. Compost has also been shown to suppress plant diseases and pests, reduce or eliminate the need for chemical fertilizers, and promote higher yields of agricultural crops.

Compost helps cleanup (remediate) contaminated soil

The composting process has been shown to absorb odors and treat semivolatile and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including heating fuels, polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and explosives. It has also been shown to bind heavy metals and prevent them from migrating to water resources or being absorbed by plants. The compost process degrades and, in some cases, completely eliminates wood preservatives, pesticides , and both chlorinated and nonchlorinated hydrocarbons in contaminated soils.

Compost helps prevent pollution

Composting organic materials that have been...

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