Organic Gardener's Composting eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Organic Gardener's Composting.

Organic Gardener's Composting eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Organic Gardener's Composting.

Later, the farmers will complain of drought or infertility and seek to support their crops with irrigation and chemicals.  Actually, if all the water that had fallen on the field had percolated into the earth, the crops probably would not have suffered at all even from extended spells without rain.  These same humusless fields lose a lot more soil in the form of blowing dust clouds when tilled in a dryish state.

The greatest part of farm soil erosion is caused by failing to maintain necessary levels of humus.  As a nation, America is losing its best cropland at a nonsustainable rate.  No civilization in history has yet survived the loss of its prime farmland.  Before industrial technology placed thousands of times more force into the hands of the farmer, humans still managed to make an impoverished semi-desert out of every civilized region within 1,000-1,500 years.  This sad story is told in Carter and Dale’s fascinating, but disturbing, book called Topsoil and Civilization that I believe should be read by every thoughtful person.  Unless we significantly alter our “improved” farming methods we will probably do the same to America in another century or two.

The Earthworm’s Role in Soil Fertility

Soil fertility has been gauged by different measures.  Howard repeatedly insisted that the only good yardstick was humus content.  Others are so impressed by the earthworm’s essential functions that they count worms per acre and say that this number measures soil fertility.  The two standards of evaluation are closely related.

When active, some species of earthworms daily eat a quantity of soil equal to their own body weight.  After passing through the worm’s gut, this soil has been chemically altered.  Minerals, especially phosphorus which tends to be locked up as insoluble calcium phosphate and consequently unavailable to plants, become soluble in the worm’s gut, and thus available to nourish growing plants.  And nitrogen, unavailably held in organic matter, is altered to soluble nitrate nitrogen.  In fact, compared to the surrounding soil, worm casts are five times as rich in nitrate nitrogen; twice as rich in soluble calcium; contain two and one-half times as much available magnesium; are seven times as rich in available phosphorus, and offer plants eleven times as much potassium.  Earthworms are equally capable of making trace minerals available.

Highly fertile earthworm casts can amount to a large proportion of the entire soil mass.  When soil is damp and cool enough to encourage earthworm activity, an average of 700 pounds of worm casts per acre are produced each day.  Over a year’s time in the humid eastern United States, 100,000 pounds of highly fertile casts per acre may be generated.  Imagine!  That’s like 50 tons of low-grade fertilizer per acre per year containing more readily available NPK, Ca, Mg and so forth, than farmers apply to grow cereal crops like wheat, corn, or soybeans.  A level of fertility that will grow wheat is not enough nutrition to grow vegetables, but earthworms can make a major contribution to the garden.

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Project Gutenberg
Organic Gardener's Composting from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.