Environmental Landscape Design Specialist

  Creating Bio-Diverse Indigenous Landscapes and Gardens

 
  Nature conservation begins at your own front door
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The Benefits of Compost to your Soil and the Environment



Nature conservation starts at your own front door so please do something to bring back nature into your own drab uninteresting garden full of unwanted invasive alien plants and turn it into a beautiful functional paradise for our local wildlife. Get started today because it is your social and environmental responsibility to do so in particular at this time of rapid climate change.
The most urgent need in this community is to control and eradicate the last amounts of unwanted invasive alien vegetation that is growing on private properties in Mount Moreland here you can all make a very important contribution to the environment that we live in by introducing a phased eradication of the aliens plants on your own property and replace them with local palnts as per the lists below.

Naturschutz beginnt vor der Haustür

Alien plant removal and rehabilitation

Mount Moreland Conservancy

Monkeys an Environmental disaster for the Mount Moreland Conservancy

Trees suitable for planting in Mount Moreland

Attractive shrubs and ground covers that do well in Mount Moreland

Suitable grasses that do well in Mount Morealand

Plants that will bring birds into garden in Mount Moreland

Plants that will bring butterflies into your garden


Dogs left unattended in public places

 xyotheca krausiana
Xylotheca krausiana 

Compost

Please consider the following
Before you dump your unwanted organic material onto your neighbour's vacant lot which is not only illegal and could land you with a fine of not less than R300.00 but can be very damaging to a healthy natural environment. In this way many unwanted alien invasive plants have been encouraged to grow on the vacant plots here in Mount Moreland. Or even worse still burning your rubbish which can cause considerable discomfort and often danger to your neighbours property should your fire get out of control as has happened in the past here in Mount Moreland, not to mention the air pollution, in fact it is also illegal to burn waste in a residential area. Avoid being a socially and environmentally unacceptable member of this community and consider converting your unwanted organic waste into valuable compost with which you can improve the quality of the soil and thereby benefit nature.

Why should you make compost

  1. Because it is environmentally responsible to do so in particular in this time of climate change and because compost is a valuable product that should remain in the ground on your own property. Green waste also does not belong on the waste tip site.
  2. Because it is socially and environmentally unacceptable to dump your rubbish on the vacant lot belonging to your neighbour next door
  3. Because it is damaging to the natural environment by killing off of the natural vegetation where is being dumped in an uncontrolled manner often spreading unwanted foreign invasive plants into the environment.
  4. Because to dump on vacant land makes the whole area look downgraded thus negatively impacting on our property values and quality of life.
  5. Because Mount Moreland falls entirely within the border of the Lake Victoria Conservatory area.
  6. Because if you do not want the waste what makes you thing your neighbour would like to have it illegally dumped onto his or her property? Or worse still the other residents do not want to see and live with it dumped there!

 The benefits of Compost to your soil and the environment

  1. Compost is nature’s best mulch and soil amendment which you can make without spending a cent. 
  2. Compost improves soil structure, texture, and aeration and increases the soil’s water-holding capacity.
  3. Compost loosens clay soils and helps sandy soils retain water. Adding compost improves soil fertility and stimulates healthy root development in plants.
  4. The organic matter provided in compost provides food for micro organisms, which keeps the soil in a healthy, balanced condition. Microscopic organisms in compost help aerate the soil, break down organic material for plant use and ward off plant disease.
  5. With a small investment in time, you can contribute to the solution of an environmental and community problem, while at the same time enriching the soil and improving the health of the plants on your property.

 What can be composted

  1. Most green matter which comes out of your garden.
  2. Dry leaves, dead twigs and branches
  3. Tea bags and coffee grinds, vegetable peelings but be sure to bury them to avoid attracting and feeding the moneys which under no circumstances whatsoever should ever be fed.
  4. Sawdust may be added to the compost, but should be mixed or scattered thinly to avoid clumping.

 What not to compost

  1. Plastic, glass, tins, old car tyres and the like should all be recycled.
  2. Left over food in particular meat, bones or fish scraps because they will attract pests rats and monkeys, perennial weeds with seeds because they can be spread with the compost or diseased plants.

 How to make compost

  1. Clear an area of all vegetation and mark out an area leaving at least a one metre border of cleared earth around where the compost heap will be constructed.  Mark the area where the compost heap will be constructed with four corner markers so as to create an orderly compost pile with the width being not greater than three metres. The material to be composted should be staked to a height of no more that two metres to allow for sufficient oxygen to reach into the centre of the pile, the maximum length of the pile does not matter.
  2. Start your compost pile on bare earth. This allows worms and other beneficial organisms to enter the compost and be transported to your garden beds and ensures good drainage of the compost heap.
  3. First lay twigs or dry grass a few inches deep this aids drainage and helps aerate the pile.
  4. Add compost materials in layers where possible, alternating moist and dry. Moist ingredients are tea bags, Lawn clippings which must be distributed thinly and evenly over the pile, green matter created as a result of pruning etc. Dry materials are branches which have been chopped into smaller pieces to aid in decomposition, dead leaves, sawdust and wood shavings as well as wood ash from your braai. If you have wood ash, sprinkle it in thin layers, or it will clump together and be slow to break down.
  5. Keep compost moist. Water occasionally if there has not been sufficient rain to do the job.
  6. Turn the pile from time to time until it is fully composted.

 An alternative to compost making

A good alternative to compost making that saves time and effort which also returns the organic waste that is produced on your property to the soil is to design your garden so that there is space behind shrubbery to place small piles of finely chopped or shredded waste material hidden from view where it can compost and return the waste organic material to the soil and the plants much like a slow release fertiliser.

Additional advantages to the natural environment

Many creatures such as firefly larvae, lizards etc take advantage of the habitat, heat and food provided by the compost heap.

Download the article as a word document

This is not the  website of the Lake Victoria Conservancy it is my private initiative to improve the living conditions in Mount Morealand for both man and beast.




Designing and Creating “Proudly South Africa” Bio-Diverse Indigenous Landscapes

Landscapes and Gardens that are Nature Friendly




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This page was created on 21.09.09
This page was last updated on 26.10.13