Because you're not dependent upon your own ways of understanding or explaining things and because you don't have to know the instructional language well or even at all are reasons why illustrations help the gardener better understand instructions for building compost bins. Everyone has an individual way of organizing and explaining reality. The words and the logic may not match up with those of the instructions' original writer. So it helps to see what the words are trying to describe.
from what i understand it is peas.
A compost pile is compost in a pile or heap. a compost pit is compost in a pit or hole in the ground.
Compost.
Cedar Grove offers several kinds of compost. They sell landscape mulch, organic compost, compost with manure and compost mixed with sand. One can order the compost online.
You can recycle your old trash can yourself by following the instructions on this website http://www.ehow.com/how_5123521_recycle-can-make-compost-bin.html
Generally you'd expect a compost heap to be about three feet across and two or three feet high. Much smaller than that and whatever you're composting will probably not heat up into "fast compost", but will simply decompose slowly, the way leaves decompose on a forest floor. That being said, it is perfectly legitimate to create "sheet compost" over a garden area rather than building a specific compost heap. To do that, you layer organic mulch thickly on top of whatever area you want to benefit from the compost (obviously not on top of tiny seeds or seedlings, though) and simply wait a year or more for it to break down into compost where it lies.
No word is exactly opposite of "compost". Most object nouns have no opposite except for the combination of "not + (that object)". Not compost is opposite of compost.
There is no need to mix old and new compost. Old compost ,if ready, should be used on its own. New material will take time to rot down to compost.
Compost is awesome Compost is formed by decayed vegetable matter. Potting compost is a mixture of various ingredients used for potting pot plants.
Commercial compost should be sterile so if bought compost the answer is no.
Provision of an environment in which compost's nutrients can go to work and keep on working is a reason why soil is good for compost (and vice versa). Compost represents the breakdown of recyclable materials into dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich organic matter. Soil serves to gather together gases, humus (organic matter), liquids, and minerals to provide anchorage for building and nutrients for feeding chains, food webs, and soil food web members.
the compost turns into monkeys