i have seen a lot of great ideas on this type of post post and i'd like to relay how I have composted for the last couple of years
my inspiration comes from my grandparents who never had a
compost pile but always put the food scraps directly on the garden
this makes sense to me for a couple of reasons... some have already been stated but mainly:
keeping the compost pile in situ means that the leacheate that is coming from the pile can be used by adjacent plants... this is evident by the amount of growth that can be seen...
the second part is the labor question.... in traditional composting you are taking a large amount of material and reducing it to a fraction of it's size and moving it around the garden... some people are also turning compost all the time which is a lot of work as well... it's much easier to me to just leave the compost to rot where it lies... i have to believe that the biological activity in that spot would be greater than other parts of the garden .... but all of that has been touched upon in other threads
I usually just throw my scraps in the garden but this year I decided to try something new as my roommates had some issues with the compost not being in one spot
my experiment with the compost pile for this year...
last fall I made an area for compost... I put layers of leaves,
straw and soil from paths that I had dug in the garden.. in my last soil layer I buried some jarusalem artichokes.... we proceded to throw our scraps on the pile all winter.... well.... this spring the growth in the sunchokes has been out of control... they started growing more than a month earlier than the ones that I have in the garden and there are now some of the plants more than two feet tall..they grew right through the raw vegetable scraps on the top of the pile.. I also have squash and cantalopes coming up as well as chia, garlic, onions and potatoes.. so I think that the compost pile is a good place to let seeds germinate on their own and see what they do in an area of increased fertility ... i think the increased heat from the pile helps with seed germination and early growth... next year I'm thinking of growing some different types of vegetables in this manner as well as all of my jarusalem artichokes as this plant already produces huge yields in our
climate is
perennial and
native...
so i guess I want to ask is if anybody has any opinions on this subject or has had any luck with growing vegetables directly in the compost pile as well as any ideas on the subject.