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  2. Composting At Home | US EPA

    www.epa.gov/recycle/composting-home

    Composting is the managed, aerobic (oxygen-required) biological decomposition of organic materials by microorganisms. Organic (carbon-based) materials include grass clippings, leaves, yard and tree trimmings, and food scraps.

  3. Composting is really just nature’s natural process of breaking down dead plant material and turning it back into soil. With this comes a lot of organic matter, which boosts the soil’s ability to grow more plants.

  4. How to Compost: A Guide to Composting at Home

    www.almanac.com/how-compost-guide-composting-home

    The key idea behind composting is that the materials and waste that you might normally throw away can be recycled to help plants grow, delivering better harvests and flower blooms. Also, compost fixes soil problems.

  5. Composting: A Complete Beginner's Guide - Healthline

    www.healthline.com/nutrition/composting-beginners-guide

    Composting involves recycling food scraps and yard trimmings to create a nutrient-rich organic material that you can add to soil. The practice decreases both food waste and your environmental...

  6. Composting 101 - NRDC

    www.nrdc.org/stories/composting-101

    Composting is the natural process of recycling organic matter, such as leaves and food scraps, into a valuable fertilizer that can enrich soil and plants.

  7. Your 5-step guide to start composting and help fight climate...

    www.npr.org/2020/04/07/828918397/how-to-compost-at-home

    Keeping food out of landfills can help fight climate change. And, luckily, there's an easy solution for your home food waste: Composting! It doesn't matter if you're in a suburban home or a tiny...

  8. Composting | US EPA - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

    www.epa.gov/sustainable-management-food/composting

    Composting is the managed, aerobic (oxygen-required) biological decomposition of organic materials by microorganisms. Organic (carbon-based) materials include grass clippings, leaves, yard and tree trimmings, food scraps, crop residues, animal manure and biosolids.

  9. How to compost—and why it’s good for the environment

    www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/article/how-to-compost

    Composting turns rotting garbage into a valuable soil enhancer that helps plants thrive. Farmers call it “black gold.” And now more cities are implementing curbside composting to help them ...

  10. Composting 101: What, Why & How to Compost at Home

    homesteadandchill.com/how-to-compost-101

    Composting is an awesome way to sustainably dispose of food waste and create free organic fertilizer. Come learn about 6 different ways to compost at home!

  11. How composting can reduce our impact on the planet - UNEP

    www.unep.org/news-and-stories/story/how-composting-can-reduce-our-impact-planet

    Proper composting of the organic waste we generate in our daily lives – inedible or unused food – can reduce the dependence on chemical fertilizers, help recover soil fertility, and improve water retention and the delivery of nutrients to plants.