It was while I was in high school that my family started a compost pile. My parents had composted religiously during the early, idealistic years of their marriage (they even kept chickens for a brief time), but as they moved from Santa Cruz to Chicago to Los Angeles to Portland, composting (and livestock) fell by the wayside. When we restarted the family composting program, we all had a lot to learn about what could go into the sink-side bucket and what items were still trash. If you've been thinking about starting your own compost pile, but don't know how to go about it, Jonathan at Wasted Food has got the poop on backyard composting, via an interview with Brian Rosa, North Carolina's composting guru. They talk bins verses piles, composting with worms and how to ensure that your compost pile is the most successful one on the block.
Fall is a terrific time to start a compost pile or bin, as you can add all the leaves and bits of organic material that you clean out of your yard to the mound. If you make the time to turn it regularly over the winter, you'll have amazingly nutritious soil for your spring and summer vegetable garden.








