yes
Sure, you can put moss in your compost.
Another name could also garden compost, with a sustainable garden, which is a way of gardening that keep the entire ecosystem is bound to stay awake. one application of garden compost with good use of the seed at planting and plant care both of fertilizers and pesticides that do not harm the environment.
No. - Fill dirt is usually junk, often from demolition.
Decreasing work, minimizing unsightliness and releasing nutrients are ways that compost heaps help decayed weeds. Disposal of weeds can be carried out in the two steps of extricating them from their location and transporting them to the pile even though other disposal demands the intermediate step of bagging or boxing. Unattractively spent weeds may be concentrated in one place, away from view while attention to proper procedure and time release aerobically decomposed heap content nutrients to sustain soils and their soil food web members.
Home depot is one great place to find information on a garden center. You can build a compost a herb garden, an island bed, a mailbox, and greenhouses. Iowas is also a good place to find information.
Compost helps plants grow.
Dark brown, fresh smelling, nutrient rich organic matteris what is a good garden compost. It's formed by the aerobic breakdown of primarily carbon rich brown materials and nitrogen rich green materials. It's called aerobic, because it takes place in the presence of adequate levels of air, heat, and moisture.
The foods that are good for compost are usually things that can decompose in soil with worms such as banana peels. This is because the worms in your compost have to be able to decompose the things you put in the compost.
I always think a well mixed mixture of 1/4 sterile topsoil, 1/4 sharp sand and 2/4 well rotted garden compost is good (also add a couple of handfuls of pelleted chicken manure). You will need to add more manure and some extra compost each year and replace the mixture every 3 years (dig it into the borders). Alternatively you could purchase bags of a proprietary garden tub compost.
Compost adds valuable nutrients to the garden soil, making the plants that grow in it more robust, tastier (if edible), and more resistant to disease. The process of breaking down organic matter into compost (aerobic decomposition) creates millions upon millions of microorganisms that are introduced into the garden soil. These microorganisms make the soil more fertile, and the compost adds vital nutrients, like Nitrogen (N) and other base elements. It is also a good way to use kitchen scraps, as opposed to throwing them out.
Good quality compost has a pH of 6.8-7.3
improve soil structureimprove soil water retention/drainegeprovides nutrientsrepress soil deseaseincrease soil biota