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Avatar for alejandro
Sep 12, 2022 6:27 PM CST
Thread OP

Hi folks, how are you doing? hope everyone is doing fine :)
I´ve been doing my own compost since last year, and I notice that the end result (after I add it to my plants ) is more like small hard as rock chunks of composts, instead of a normal soil consistency...
Every place I read about compost they say that the end result must look,feel and smell like soil.. In my case it smells like soil and has the same colour as normal soil... but when it dries it gets extreamly solid , like if it was a rock.... will try to add some pictures to clarify this.
Any idea of what could I be doing wrong?
Its a home plastic compost bin, with draining/ventilation holes. I only compost raw vegetables, fruits, cardboard, white paperand coffee . nothing more than that..
Thank You! Thumbs up


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Last edited by alejandro Sep 12, 2022 6:28 PM Icon for preview
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Sep 12, 2022 7:43 PM CST
Name: Larry
Enterprise, Al. 36330 (Zone 8b)
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I have never seen anything like that.
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Sep 12, 2022 7:47 PM CST
Name: Zoë
Albuquerque NM, Elev 5310 ft (Zone 7b)
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I've had that happen when I let it dry out before it's completely decomposed. Here where it's hot and arid, we talk about the THREE requirements for compost: brown, green and blue (water).
Avatar for RpR
Sep 14, 2022 12:10 PM CST
Name: Dr. Demento Jr.
Minnesota (Zone 3b)
It is not totally composted; I have cold compost piles and I let is sit for years till that bottom is totally composted.
Mine is 90 percent leaves and garden residue, with coffee grounds and fruit peels occasionally.
I would try adding coffee grounds, if you drink coffee.
What you could also do, if you have room, is take the compost from the first container and put it all into a second bin , wire with open sides works well, and let it sit there for a year or two., it will/should be very fine and loose by then.
Time improves compost, plus the weight, and heat caused by the weight, a larger pile has makes composting without turning work, but it has to be kept moist.
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Sep 15, 2022 7:42 AM CST
Name: Sally
central Maryland (Zone 7b)
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That's news to me also.

I suspect it is lacking the fibrous bulk that you find in a lot of compost that has tree leaves, garden waste, horse manure, lawn clippings etc . I think it's fine to use but isn't adding the kind of cellulose bulk and longer term soil structure conditioning you see more often.

and I think once it gets rained on and in the ground, it'll soften and blend. Thumbs up Thumbs up
Plant it and they will come.
Avatar for bunnydefluff
Sep 29, 2022 10:02 PM CST
Name: John K.
Malaysia
Organic Gardener
Looks like soil with high clay content to me?
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Sep 30, 2022 7:19 AM CST
Name: stone
near Macon Georgia (USA) (Zone 8a)
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alejandro said: I notice that the end result (after I add it to my plants ) is more like small hard as rock chunks of composts, instead of a normal soil consistency...

Every place I read about compost they say that the end result must look,feel and smell like soil..

In my case it smells like soil and has the same colour as normal soil... but when it dries it gets extreamly solid , like if it was a rock....
Any idea of what could I be doing wrong?

Thumb of 2022-09-13/alejandro/426894

Seems like I've seen similar... And yes, I think the suggestions about clay and dryness are about right.

I'd use it.

I disbelieve that you did anything wrong, time spent on top of the soil will eventually convert this mixture in appearance to more what you expected.

I wouldn't worry about this... it will work just as well as the so-called 'perfect' compost.
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