Stuff You Should Know - Selects: Composting: Nature's Most Interesting Process
Episode Date: August 28, 2021You may think composting is just a bunch of old banana peels rotting away into dirt but, friend, you're not looking closely enough. Inside that compost pile is a microcosmic universe doing some magica...l stuff. Learn all about it in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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Hey everybody, it's Josh and for this week's Select, I picked our episode on composting.
You'll hear Chuck and me get super jazzed about earth science, gardening, invertebrates,
all of our favorite things. I hope you enjoy it and I hope it inspires you to start composting
or at least start pocket mulching.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, the man, Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and I
think I neglected to say last time. Yeah, you did. Guest producer Noel is with us. That's right.
So if you listen to the Shroud of Turin episode and you're like, man, that sounds great. Yeah,
that was Noel. Yeah, thanks Noel. This show today, I've been replaying one of my favorite
Simpsons jokes ever over and over in my head. I laughed already just hearing Simpsons jokes.
It was from one of the Halloween episodes when they did the Nightmare on Elm Street riff.
This is old, old ones, where groundskeeper Willie was Freddy Krueger and he turned into
I think like a shredder or a tractor or something and ran over people or something and said,
when I'm done, they're going to need to do a compost boredom. Oh, wow, that is a bad joke.
Yeah, it was really good. I mean, the Simpsons didn't get too punny, but that was a good one.
Well, anything goes on a treehouse of horror, you know? Agreed. So, you know,
there's a bunch of cities that have kind of gotten woke to the idea that we should be
recycling or composting our food. Did you know that? Sure. I saw a stat that said something like
40% of food gets wasted, but I got suspicious because I also saw that 40% of the stuff that
goes to municipal landfills or trash is food waste, which doesn't necessarily mean it's
wasted food, because I don't think you would count like a banana peel as food waste.
Is it a pizza box? Food waste? No. Okay, so they're not counting food packaging as food waste.
No, but I think they're counting everything that has to do with food that could conceivably be eaten
as wasted food, which is not the same as food waste. Okay. The point is the legitimate stat
that I saw just about everywhere is that if you took all the garbage that the United States throws
away into a landfill, 40% of that is food waste. And I'm sure some of it is a whole cake, some
complete moron threw a whole cake away for no good reason. I was on a diet. Well, that's actually
a pretty good reason, but you know what I'm saying. Yeah. 40% of all that trash is food.
The problem is you might say, well, who cares? Trash decomposes. That's great. That's true.
It does decompose, but in the landfills that the United States uses, we make sure they're
anaerobic. Yeah. Oxygen doesn't get down there. Yeah. So a whole different decomposition process
takes place. And in a landfill, in anaerobic decomposition, methane is produced and methane
is bad news. Yes. Methane is something on the order of 70% worse. I know there's a much more
scientific way to put it, but it's 70% better than carbon dioxide as far as greenhouse gases go.
70% more potent. How about that? Yeah. Okay. So you don't want methane. If you have to choose
between methane and carbon dioxide, you want to go with carbon dioxide. And it just so happens
that if you compost food waste, mostly carbon dioxide is produced, methane's not. So if you're
diverting this food waste from the landfill, there's a whole bunch of different stuff you're
doing. Number one, you're saving all that 40% of the space for actual trash. So you're extending
the life of your landfills. You're keeping all that methane from being produced. And as if it
couldn't get any better, you are creating an amazing fertilizer that you can use to grow.
You could grow a tree out of a shoe. This fertilizer is so good. The old shoe tree. Sure.
Yeah. We've danced around this a lot. Well, you just referenced our, and I don't like to
toot around horns a lot, but that landfill episode was great. Landfills and don't forget the plasma
incinerator one. Yeah. Basically, any of our waste management ones are... Yeah. What else?
I think Gorilla Gardening we touched on this some. And a couple of others we've mentioned
composting. And to the extent where I thought we had done one on composting. Not yet. But we had not
until about five and a half minutes ago. And that's a guess. So if you write it and say like,
it was eight minutes, Chuck. You're grounded. So like you mentioned, I don't think these numbers
are accurate anymore, but we generate, let's just say a lot of millions of tons, hundreds of millions
of tons of trash. And about 25 to 30% of that is recovered through recycling, which includes
composting, which is good. But that number, if it was 70%, would be amazing. Does that include
composting? That recycling number? Yeah. Oh, okay. Yeah. If it'd be 70, that'd be great. Yeah. 80,
why not? Yeah. Let's shoot for 90. Well, supposedly Seattle itself has a goal of something like 60 to
70% of all of its trash being recycled by the end of the year. Of course they do, because Seattle
does it right. And they actually have compulsory mandatory composting now. Like you have to
compost if you live in the city of Seattle. Why don't I live there? I don't know. I don't know.
I asked myself that a lot. You know, Emily and I went for our two shows ago on that lovely spring
weekend. Oh, it was gorgeous. And we stayed extra in Seattle. And after we were like, we're moving
here. That's it. It's a great town. I've said it before on the show. Dogs and bars. That was all
it took. Yeah. Dog bar tenders. But again, dogs playing poker. Sure. Again, it's easy to fall
in love with Seattle on a perfect weekend in April. Yeah. I hear it rains there a lot though.
I'd still live there. It's a great place. And you know what? You may see us again this year,
Seattle. Tease tease. You're such a tease. All right. So composting is great for a thousand
reasons. But one first and foremost is that it's not hard to do and it's not expensive to do.
No. If you just want to be... And there are many different levels of composting from big city programs
to the home farmer that takes it super seriously. If you just want to lessen the impact a little
bit on your landfill, your local landfill, feel like you're doing the right thing and get a little
bit of nutrient rich goodness fertilizer to use, you can have just a little small little composting
operation going on at your house. Yeah. This is all you need. Organic waste. And we don't even mean
something that is like organic. We mean like organic, meaning it's composed mostly of carbon.
It was once alive at one point, right? Yeah. And I made a poopy noise, which you can't use poop.
No, that's night soil. It's the opposite of what I should have done. What's a banana sound?
That's a banana sound, right? You need soil. You need water. You need air or oxygen. Right. So the
organic waste is the stuff you're going to have broken down, which in this case, in the case of
a compost pile is food. The soil. Well, partially, sure. But no, no, it's food for the things that
are in the soil. Yes. Right? It's an energy source. Yes, yes. And nutrient source for what's in the
soil. So you add soil. When you're adding soil, you're basically adding starter culture to the
compost. What you're doing is grabbing microbes from say in your yard and putting them on the
compost pile and say, dinner's on, boys. They eat and poop. Yes. But you don't want to poop in it.
You need a little bit of water, like you said, to keep it moist, but you don't want to keep it
over wet because microbes like slightly moist soil and then air because again, again, this is really,
really important. You can let your compost pile degrade anaerobically, but it's going to produce
methane, which is bad for the environment. Bad for your neighbors. Bad for your neighbors. Bad for
you. It's going to stink. It might blow up. Who knows. You don't want to smoke near what's called a
passive compost pile. So you want to just introduce oxygen and all this sounds very complicated.
It's not. It's hitting it with your hose. And by that, I mean spraying water on it with your hose.
This is realized you can get something with your hose too. It's like turning it over, right?
With a pitchfork. To add oxygen. It's as simple as that.
Yeah. It's really easy. So what you're going to end up with the end, like we said, is really
fertilizer, but it's called humus. Don't call it humus. No, that's different. That has two M's,
right? This has just one M. And those little microorganisms in there, they're going to break
this stuff down. They're going to eat it. They're going to poop it out and they're going to multiply
and there's going to be, we'll talk about the critters a little more later, but they're going
to be different critters along the way. They need those critters, right? Then critters that
eat those critters, right? And it's going to get really hot up in there. It might steam,
then it's going to cool back down. It's going to get smaller. And it's just like this little
micro environment. It is really, really neat. There's actually a food web in there. There's
a lot of physics and chemistry that's going on. It is very neat. I'm fascinated by it too.
But the upshot of composting is that you're taking something and it's being broken down into its
constituent parts so that it can be reused by plants and the whole circle of life can start over
again. Yeah. You're sort of just accelerating the natural process of rot. You're optimizing it.
Yeah. Like you mentioned a passive composter, which is to say, you know, lazy hippies. You could
just throw all that junk out of your window if you wanted in a big pile and throw your,
some grass clippings on and throw your fall leaves on there. Just leave it there. And that
thing will eventually compost itself. Well, again, it'll produce methane. You'll blow up.
Or you could, you know, you could turn it every now and then and maybe avoid that.
But no, I think that makes it an active pile. Well,
slightly active pile then. Right. I don't mean like every other day. Right. Just to avoid methane
maybe. But that would still technically be an active pile. It'd be a poorly managed active
pile. Yeah. Slightly active. Poorly managed. So I'm serious. That's what they call it. I know.
Okay. I'm just, we'd like to make up our own names for things. I didn't know you were going to
cease that in your nine. I got you. Sorry. We'll call that the doobie pile. Okay.
No, it's called active management. I just wanted to make sure that we got it on the record. So
the big goal here is to reduce your waste. They say in this article ultimately will
save you tax money because your landfill won't. I thought that was hilarious. Yeah. I mean,
don't count on seeing any tax breaks coming anytime soon. But that got William F. Buckley's
attention. Probably so. So how do you do this? Let's say you want to start composting. There's
a one, two, three, four, five step process to get this thing going. Okay. Well, let's talk about
them. The first thing you want to do is just pick out the place you want to do it. All right.
Because it's, you know, it's a bit of a mess. It doesn't have to be necessarily, but
depending on your neighbors, they might be like, well, great. I'm glad you started an
unsightly pile of kitchen rubbish and food waste that I can see from my deck. Thanks a lot for
that. So that's something you want to keep in consideration. Apparently, even if you do have
a very well-managed active pile, what would you call that? I'm not making out funny names anymore.
No more jokes. I've ruined it. It still may stink here there. Sure. So you want it kind of
away from the house, but not so far away that if you're feeling lazy, you're not going to go out
and tend to it on a daily or every other daily basis. Yeah. And if you have that much land,
that you have a compost pile a mile from your house, good for you. Yeah, sure. Got some acreage.
There might be some local rules either from your HOA, heaven forbid, if you have to belong to one
of those, or maybe just your municipality might have rules and regulations. Yeah. So check with
them first. Sure. That's what everyone does before they start a compost pile. They go down to city
hall and say, tell me the rules and regulations surrounding composting in my yard. I think the
first thing everyone does is start throwing their eggshells out the window. Sure. That's how it
always starts. Right. It's like, I'm tired of these things being in my trash. They recommend
downwind because like you said, it might stink a bit. Sun is good in a way, but you don't want it
baking in the sun all day. No, because it'll dry it out. Remember, you want it to be kind of moist.
Yes. And the sunlight can actually dry it out. Sure. So you want, apparently the best place to
put it is under a deciduous tree. Good spot. Yeah. Because in the wintertime, there's no leaves on
the tree. So the sun's going to keep it warm when it's cold. Yeah. But during the summer, it's going
to be shaded by the tree so it won't dry out. It's just perfect. It is. Deciduous tree equals love.
Wind is good to provide a little air, but you don't want it blowing, scattering the stuff all over
the place, drying it out again. Right. No good. What else? Drainage. Don't start one in that old
baby pool that you don't want to throw out. Especially if your baby's in there.
Yeah. You want good drainage. Like generally, you build, either build a bin. We'll talk about
this stuff actually right now. Yeah. But it's off the ground. Sure. It's on the legs.
Yeah. Although you can have a pile. Right. But generally, you want to build a bin or
buy a bin. Right. And those things sit off the ground. Right. Because of drainage.
That's part of it for sure. Yeah. You also want dirt rather than say like a concrete pad or
something like that. Yeah. Don't compost in your driver. Right. It's not a good idea.
As far as structures go, you can, like you said, you can go buy one. They're not very expensive
from what I understand, right? Yeah. It depends on the size. You can also say go buy some cinder blocks
and build something like that. Sure. But basically, you can cut compost structures into two.
There's a single bin and there's a three bin system. So in the single bin system,
you put new stuff on top, new banana peels. This is what I think of when I think composting,
you know? Banana peels. Sure. Yeah. You put new stuff on top and then you take a pitchfork
or shovel or something like that and you work it in to the compost. And at the bottom of this
structure, say it's open when you're walking up to it, the finished compost will accumulate at
the bottom. And the reason it accumulates at the bottom is because it's a finer grain. Yeah.
And that's it. Single bin, new stuff at the top. Easy peasy. Stuff that's in process in the middle,
stuff that's finished in the bottom. And it will just naturally kind of separate like that.
Yeah. And when we're talking structure like that, if you want to build one, you know,
build a wood frame and it's like got chicken wire walls and a chicken wire bottom. And that gives
you the air. And if you've got something to collect it underneath, it's going to fall, you know,
when it's small enough. Right. Some other stuff might fall, you may need to add it back in. Yeah.
But with the three bin system, you've got, well, you've got three bins. You've got the starter
stuff. You've got the, once it starts to break down a little stuff, and then you have the more
finished product. Right. And you have to actively manage that system. Yeah, that system sounds
unnecessarily difficult. I kind of like it. Oh, you're a three bin guy? Well, we're about to get
into this for real. We've been lazily composting for a while, but we're doing our whole backyard,
like we're getting rid of our grass basically. Oh yeah. 100% of it. What are you going to do?
Compost? Mulch and beds and plants and herbs and walking paths. You're going to put cacti in and
all that? No cacti, but we do have a palm tree. We've had that forever though. There you go.
Yeah, just getting rid of the grass basically. Because it takes up so much water?
Just, it's just, it's not good grass to begin with. And I'm not the best about cutting it.
Long mowers are terrible for the environment. Plus you don't water enough. You never let a quarter
inch of water accumulate on the surface. Exactly. Yeah, just, and you know, it'll look nicer. So,
part of this and this company that's doing it is, it's not just a landscaping company. They're a
bunch of hippies. Oh, gotcha. So, they're designing it in such a way that it feeds itself and part
of that is composting. Gotcha. Anyway, long way of saying, we're going to start like for real
composting very shortly. And you're going with the three bin structure? I don't know. I think I'm
going to build it. Well, it's the structure Emily tells me to build. Okay. That's the easiest way
to say it. Gotcha. Yeah. But if you buy one, like you were saying, there's all different kinds,
just, you know, look it up online or go to a hardware store and, you know, many of them will
look like a big barrel on legs and it literally turns, like has a crank on it to where you can
turn this thing in circles. It's old timey. So, you don't have to use a pitchfork at all. Right.
You don't have to must your hands or your hair. It's like a bingo spinner. Yeah. But with banana
pills. Have you ever played bingo? Like legit bingo in a room with hundreds of people? Not hundreds.
Well, more than like you and Yumi. Yes. Like a bingo parlor. Is that what they're called? Yeah.
I've actually gone to a couple of like senior retirement homes and helped out with bingo.
Wow. And that's a pretty, pretty cool experience actually. Because do you run the bingo? It's
a, you just play and kind of, I'm not qualified to run the bingo. Right. Right. Just walk around
and point out if somebody missed one that they, you know, it was called that kind of thing. But
did you want to talk about taking it seriously? Do they? Oh my God. And then you have to be a
certified bingo master to run the show? Yeah. And they'll like tell you to hurry up and like shout
if you're, if you're not like loud enough or fast enough or going too fast. So the point is not to
have fun. No, the point is to win. Wow. What do they win? They have prizes? Yeah. Nothing much
usually. I mean, but you can, I think like you can play bingo in casinos for thousands and thousands
of dollars. Yeah. Usually at old folks homes, they don't, you know, sure. They, there's not thousands
of dollar prizes. Like honey buns and cigarettes. Right. Right. Exactly. All right. Well, let's
take a break here after we have talked structure and we'll talk a little bit about what you want,
what kind of junk you want to throw in that pile.
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All right, Chuck. So we're talking what you want to throw in the pot, right? You got your bin,
either a triple, three-banger. Got your site. Or a single. You got your site. You bribed your
neighbor to look the other way. You bribed your neighbor. Exactly. You bought a goat.
Oh, man. Talking about green living. My neighbor has goats now, like five of them.
Are they loud? No. Oh, that's great. Everyone's while I hear them, but it's a joy to hear. So it's
not like a rooster. Do you wake up and look out and say, morning, Satan? No. Well, goat's one of
my favorites. So it's kind of nice to have them around. Are they baby goats or adult goats? No,
they're big ones. I mean, she got them to maintain the property because she was tired of cutting.
I guess she didn't want to zero-scape it, so she bought goats. Anyway, it's awesome.
Kitchen waste. Josh, that's what you want to throw in there. Well, yeah, that's the first one. That's
the one that everybody says. That's why you compost, right? Yeah. And yeah, banana peels.
Everybody knows that. But did you also know you can compost apple cores in orange rinds?
You can also eat apple cores. Yeah, you believe there is no such thing as a core, right? Yes,
because there's not. Same people who leave their apple cores left over, they can compost those
things. Those are the easy ones. You can also do coffee grounds. Yeah, that's a good one. Paper
filters. Throw that filter and all in there. Okay, so let's just say I ate maybe a whole pizza to
myself. I've got a couple of napkins wadded up. What do I do with those, Chuck? I think you can
throw those napkins in there, Josh. Yeah. Isn't that crazy? It is crazy. Newspaper.
Yeah. Corn cobs. If you still read a newspaper, if you get your news on the internet, throw your
laptop in there. Watermelon rinds. Yeah, seeds, leaves. You know, the butt into the asparagus
that no one cooks? Yeah. Throw that junk in there. You can also do yard waste too. Sure. Right,
so you've got grass clippings, which we'll talk about in a second. We got a couple warnings
as far as grass clippings goes. Not too much. But let's say you're raking leaves or something
like that. Throw some leaves on there. Yeah, good crunchy brown ones. And you can also throw
like trimmings from your shrubs if you trim your woody shrubs. The key here is this, Chuck. You
want to cut all this stuff up in small bits. Yeah, don't throw a whole corn cob in there.
You can. No. Your compost pile, just throw it right back out. Yeah, it'll just spit it right
back out. Right. It's very funny. It'll make a burping noise. Yeah. They say to shred the corn
cob. I don't have a corn cob shredder. I don't either. I've never thought about that. I wouldn't
waste like my blender blade on chopping up corn cobs. I think the point is breaking into little
pieces. Sure. You can break it into little pieces though. Yeah, you probably cut a corn cob up.
Yeah. And you can also, like, you can take all this stuff and chop it. Anything you can put
into smaller pieces, the better. Yeah. Because as we'll see, what you're really doing is you're
not just breaking it up. You have to look at it like what you're doing is increasing the surface
area so more microbes can work on it at once. Yeah, like if you have, I know you hate broccoli,
but you cut the little florets off and you've got that big green broccoli stalk.
Cut that thing up as small as you can. Set it on fire. You have patience for
and throw that junk in there. Yeah. Basically channel your inner anal chef.
Gross. You remember him?
The anal chef? Yeah. Was that a real thing? Yeah, I'm starting out live.
Phil Hartman. No, I don't remember that. The anal retain of chef. Oh, okay. I forgot the
retain of part. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I remember that. Big qualifier. I'm just like, I'm gonna get that.
I don't get that joke, mommy. Remember the anal retain of chef? Yeah, I do remember that now.
He'd like start to, if he was dicing like green peppers and one of them was bigger than the rest,
he'd just be like, okay, well, you want to take those chunks and you want to put them into a
paper towel and then you want to fold that up and then you put that into some aluminum foil and
you fold that up and you put that in a paper bag and you roll it up and then you staple it and then
you throw it away. Boy, man, what a loss that was. Oh, it still makes me sad. So you mentioned
newspaper earlier. If you live near the ocean and you've got your hands on some seaweed or some kelp,
you can rinse that stuff off. Right. So you don't want all that salt content in there.
No. But it's really good and nutrient rich. If you rinse that off and put it in your compost
pile. Yeah. And it's also good for you to eat too. I know I sound nuts, but just eat that stuff.
What do you mean? People eat seaweed. It's so good for you. Yeah, salt dust. Do you know I eat that?
No, but like I'm building my compost bin, I can put that salt dust back in it. How about that?
Yeah. Pretty neat. Circle of life, baby. What should not you compost? Night soil.
Which is poopy soil. Yep. And then it's your dog, your cat, you don't go take a big dump
over this pile. No. I know you want to. No, that's not good. No.
Disease garden plants, that's a big one. Yeah. Some of this stuff though, as we'll find,
doesn't quite make sense, but it's just good to air on the side of garbage in, garbage out,
except with compost. If you put garbage, garbage in, then it's going to be really bad. If you
put good, healthy garbage in, it's going to come out as quite good. So you don't want to put any
disease plants in there. Invasive weeds are another one too. Yeah, but it says you can also put weeds
in there. So I guess you just need to figure out which ones are the bad ones. Yeah. So this
specifically calls out Buttercup's Morning Glory and Quackgrass. I'm quite sure that there's plenty
of seeds that wouldn't survive the composting process, but apparently these two. So stay away
from the Quackgrass. Yeah. I think that was the big mantra at Woodstock. Sure. It's a gateway drug.
Don't have the yellow sunshine or the Quackgrass. It was the brown acid. Brown acid. Which I mean,
who wants brown acid, you know? And what about, you were talking about kitchen stuff, what about
meat and dairy? Oh, okay. That's controversial. It is because Emily has taken classes and they
were like, no, don't use any of that. Yeah. That's like animal cells and fats in particular,
they putrify, they don't decompose. And putrefaction makes some stinky stuff. And I think it can also
generate a lot of disease-bearing pathogens. So I was surprised to see this article say,
yeah, put it in there. Well, and they kind of said in this article, if you're really
heavily managing this thing, you can do it. But I don't know, I've just heard don't.
They said, turn it into a slurry, which I don't want to see Freud and Rich's blender at home.
A steak fat slurry. With corn cob bleavings on it. But he said, whip it up into a slurry. And as
long as it's a good, hot, actively managed pile, it won't be a problem. I'm going to go ahead and
say, I don't think you should do that. Okay. I don't know what to do with the animal leavings,
but I don't think you should compost it. All right. It might make sense to you to say, hey,
I have an outdoor fire pit. I bet that would be great in my composter. No. Incorrect. Although
this specifically says charcoal ashes. I think that's... Any kind of charred ashes? Yeah, like
burnt wood is called charcoal. So are you sure? Because I know what you just said was true.
But supposedly the entire Amazon basin, and I learned this from the greatest book of all time,
1491 by Charles C. Mann, the entire Amazon basin was a managed forest that the indigenous peoples
down there had made completely fertile and fecund by instead of slash and burn, they were using
slash and char techniques. And there was way more carbon locked into the charred tree stumps,
and there was the ashes. So it became more fertile. So I have a question about that one.
You know, I'm going to back off of my determined stance and say, I don't know.
It would make sense if it was coal, like if it was coal. Well, like charcoal briquettes, because
they have cement and all sorts of chemicals and junk in them. But if it's charred wood or wood
ash, I wonder. All right. Well, somebody let us know. Charles C. Mann, tell us. The pesticide
treated plants, you know, you know my stance on pesticides, period. Sure. Don't use them. But
if you do, definitely don't put that stuff in there. Because your whole thing here is you want to,
you want a more or less organic compost pile right in the end. And so one of the things that
people love about composted is it actually is organic. And we're going to explain how I didn't
know this until we did this research. But we'll explain how because we're going to go through
the process that your compost pile undergoes right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest
thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough, or you're at the end
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Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
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ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the I Heart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikala. And to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India.
It's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology. And lately,
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention.
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded
up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league
baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet
and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good.
There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic
or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the
iHeart Radio App, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. I did something we rarely do, which is look something up as we're podcasting because
it just sounded lazy to be like, oh, we don't know this one.
GardenZalive.com says wood ashes are so strongly alkaline that it doesn't take a lot to upset
the balance in the pile and stop the processing. You can add a very small amount of wood ash
from like your fireplace or wood burning stove, but apparently not much. So I think,
you know, like you're kind of right in that it's not completely verboten, but it sounds like too
much is not a good thing. I think that's what Freud and Rich are saying, like don't even mess
with it. Okay. So why bother? Put in animal fats instead. Well, and that's what the person from
GardenZalive was saying is like, it's so little that it's not really going to make a difference.
And if you're trying to get rid of it in a different way, she's like, it's not really
going to matter. But it raises a great question, Chuck. Why in the name of all things holy, would
it matter what the alkalinity is of your compost pile? And I'll tell you why. Because it's a
chemistry experiment. It is. It's a chemistry experiment. It's also a biological experiment.
You have a microcosm growing there. And there's actually really easy things you can do to
optimize this and basically create a Xanadu paradise for the microbes and primary and
secondary and tertiary consumers of this stuff that you're putting in there to break down
so that they just have the greatest life that any invertebrate or microbe ever had.
All right. Should we talk chemistry a bit and come back to just the management and stuff?
All right. What you're really talking about here for an ideal composting scene,
you need a disco ball. Right. And you need a proper CN ratio, which is carbon to nitrogen
ratio. And depending on how wonky you want to get, if you want to start measuring things,
you can do that. But from what I gather, just try and do a lot to a little about 30 to one
carbon to nitrogen. Right. And eyeball it. And the rule of thumb is this. If it's green and
recently deceased and by green, like a nice banana peel would qualify as this.
If it's pliable and green or again, recently deceased, it is high in nitrogen. Right.
If it's brown and dried, it's high in carbon. So you want to actually, when you're adding the
compost, you want to just kind of layer this stuff in about those ratios 30 to one. And there's
actually tables. Like if you're a big time into this, there are tables out there that tell you
just about exactly the carbon and nitrogen ratio in each individual thing. But what we said earlier,
you want to avoid grass clippings. This is why, because they're too high in nitrogen.
Right. And what happens when you have too much nitrogen?
It's bad. Right. It makes your piles stinky. Yeah. Is that where the methane starts creeping in?
That actually leads to ammonia gas. Oh, okay. Right. But you also don't want too much carbon
either, Chuck. Yeah. Because so carbon and nitrogen, carbon is like the building block and
it's an energy source for these microbes. Nitrogen is essential to their growth and
their metabolic activity as well. Yeah. But when they have this in these concentrations,
that's when they flourish. Yeah. And the other problem with carbon too is it just
breaks down so slowly. Well, it depends on the source. Yeah. That's true. But generally,
a lot of the carbon sources like newspaper and corn cobs and stuff like that,
it's just a much slower process. Right. Right. So like they have much tougher
structural support in their cells. They have structural integrity. Exactly.
They need to have a good saying that rhymes. Like if it's yellow, let it mellow. If it's
brown, flush it down. Sure. I thought you were heading toward that. I was just,
can I like on the edge of my seat? No. Like if it's green. I walked right past that one.
That's brown. Maybe there is one that we don't know. Or maybe someone can write one.
Like a creative listener. I'd love to hear it. I'll bet we get a bunch of those.
All right. Oxygen, if we're talking ratios. And again, you can walk out as much as possible.
But the good news is about your compost piles. It's not like it needs to be like the oxygen
that you need. No. Walking around to breathe. Which I think 21% in the atmosphere. Yeah.
That's what we have going on. It can get by these aerobic microbes. It is low as 5%.
Yeah. That's cutting it close. That's cutting it close. They say try to hover somewhere around
10 or up. Right. And how do you measure that? You don't. You just aerate your pile and it's fine.
By either turning it or you can do hold PVC. And I guess that brings us kind of to the management
part. Sure. You don't just sit there unless you want to have it totally pass a pile.
And who wants that? You have to manage this thing either every day or every other day. Turn it,
like we were saying. Sure. Either with the little crank. If you've got a handy little
barrel unit or with a pitch fork or they call it a composting fork in here.
That's pretty fancy. It's probably the same thing. It's the same thing as a pitch fork except
like $50 more. You want to water it some. But again, do you want to give watering advice?
You don't want it for me. You don't want it to be soaking wet. No. You want it to be moist. Yeah.
Damp. People hate that word. So we'll say damp. And again, I mentioned the perforated
PVC pipes. That can help. It says you can avoid turning it by having those pipes.
I would still turn it. I would too just to mix it up, right?
Yeah. But putting PVC pipes throughout your pile would make it really difficult to turn.
You can pull them out. I guess you could. But getting them back in is a real pain.
I think you can stick them back in. Another way to get to introduce oxygen is earthworms.
Oh man. This is where I go crazy. Oh yeah.
We have a lot of worms on our property just because there's a lot of worms in Georgia.
Yeah. We did a great episode on earthworms, remember?
Yeah. And every time I find them, I pick them up. I show them to Emily and she immediately says,
throw it in the garden. And that's because we weren't composting heavily.
Now it's going to be thrown in the compost pile. Sure.
But these guys are great because they naturally, I mean they do a lot of things,
but one of the things they do is naturally aerate by just tunneling through that stuff.
Yeah. So earthworms and then worms in general are probably the most important non-microscopic
resident in your compost pile. Yeah.
Because they do so much. So worms and especially earthworms and most types of nematodes,
they actually go in and like eat a lot of the stuff that's in the compost pile,
a lot of the food waste, right? Or organic waste. And in doing so, they break it down.
And as they break it down, they make it easier for the microbes to digest themselves.
Should we start with the microbes? Yeah.
Okay. So again, this compost pile, when you add food waste to the pile and add soil,
you're introducing energy source to energy consumer. Okay? Yes.
And at the base of this is microbial life, bacteria mostly. But the bacteria go to town,
they start eating this stuff. And the smaller it is, the more surface area there is,
the more the bacteria can eat. And they actually take the nutrients out of this
and use it for cellular respiration, which is why they need oxygen because they take oxygen
and combine it with the carbon. And they create ATP, which they use as an energy source to power
their cells and live and frolic and play. And in doing so, they create carbon dioxide.
That's right. So as they're doing this, they're actually breaking the stuff down
from what you'd recognize as a banana peel closer and closer to that finished humus product.
Yes. So you got bacteria and they're a big part of it. And depending on the phase
that the compost pile is in, there will be different kinds of bacteria in your compost pile.
Yeah. And it's not just bacteria. There's fungi doing lots of work. We mentioned nebotodes.
You're going to eventually get mites in there and slugs. You've already thrown your worms in,
some millipedes doing some action, all those cute little legs. And overall,
these are known as primary consumers. Some are. Are all of them primary consumers?
Well, they're listed by this person who made this fancy chart.
So then above that, Chuck, you've got the secondary consumers.
Secondo. And those are the predators of the primary consumers, right?
Yeah. And then you have tertiary consumers. They're the predators of the secondary consumers.
And so you put all this together and what you have is a food web. If microbes breaking the stuff
down, worms and stuff doing the same thing in some ways. And then other predators, different
graduated levels of predators, preying on the smaller animals to keep their population in check
and to keep everything in a perfect balance so that it's as efficient as possible.
And eventually a great white shark comes along.
It eats the whole pile. Thanks to a sharknada. What gets me the best part of all this to me
is that if you look at the lifespan of a compost pile from brand new to finished humus.
From banana peel to humus. It forms a bell as far as the temperature gradient goes, right?
Yeah, it's really kind of cool. So the first stage is the mesophilic stage.
Temperatures get up to I think 40 degrees Celsius. I can't remember what that is in Fahrenheit.
Yeah, we'll go with Celsius though. Okay. So it's warmish. And then as the cellular
respiration mounts and builds and more and more bacteria are born and start eating and
and carry this cellular respiration out, the byproducts are CO2 and heat. And heat starts
to accumulate in the compost pile so much so that it gets up to something like 50 to 60 degrees
Celsius, which is like 100 to 150 degrees Fahrenheit. Yeah, that's hot. At this point,
your organisms are going to change. You're going to have thermophilic. These are a little heat
loving critters and they move in because it's nice and warm. They're snowbirds. They're desert
dwellers and they like it when it's warm. But here's the thing is you want to like,
you don't want it to get too hot. So you want to continue to aerate and keep that temperature and
check. Right. What you want is that natural bell to happen on its own. Right. So the mesophilic
bacteria die off or they go kind of dormant as it enters the thermophilic phase. And then after
the thermophilic phase ends, the reason it ends is because they've eaten up all of the stuff that's
there to eat and only the hard stuff's left over. And so the thermophiles go away and some of the
mesophiles come back and new stuff comes in like ectenomycetes, ectenomycetes, which are kind of
like a weird fungi bacteria cross. And they break down like the really hard, woody, shrubby stuff.
Yeah. And they finish it off. And this third phase is called the curing phase. Right. Yeah.
And at the end of all of it, you have this great nutrient-rich humus. But in the middle of that,
when it gets really hot, it gets so hot, Chuck, that pathogens that can make you sick, that can
make animals sick, that can make plants sick are actually killed off in the phase, which is why
when you get your hands on compost on humus, it's organic. It's been basically treated naturally
to rid itself of parasites, pathogens, all sorts of bad stuff. And all that's left is the nutrients
that have been broken down in the process that a plant can use very easily. And again, the circle
of life starts over again. Yeah. And I mentioned sun earlier, it can dry it out. But if it gets
over 65 Celsius, it's going to kill off so many microbes. It's going to really slow down your
process. Right. So that's another reason you turn it is to kind of keep, and again, don't have it
direct sunlight, but it's going to keep that temperature where it does its thing naturally.
Right. Where you don't want to put a heat lamp on it. You just want to keep it moist,
turn it over and let it do its thing. Yeah. And you might come out there on a chilly morning.
There might be steam coming off of that sucker. Yeah. And dude, that's when you just like...
You go hot dog. Yeah. Hot diggity dog. And you go inside and you eat a banana. Yeah. And you
throw it on the pile. Yeah. All right. So when is it all over? Oh man. I just love... This is why
I love earth science. Yeah. It's really amazing. Because it's like, it requires a little bit of
human management, but then you kind of just step away and say, do your thing. Yeah. It's really
neat. When is it over? Well, you can tell there's a few ways of being able to tell. The temperature
starts to go down. If it's below 100 degrees Fahrenheit, it's out of the thermophilic phase.
Yes. And it's now into the mesophilic phase. This says that it's probably done. I disagree.
I think you probably want it even cooler than that because the longer you let it cure, the more
diverse the microbes inside are going to be, the better the soil that you use to amend it with
is going to be. Sure. Temperature is one. One of it is just eyeball it. And if it's about 50%
decomposed, like if you still see clearly a banana peel, then it's not done. Right. You don't want
to recognize this stuff as food at this point or an eggshell or whatever. And is it smaller?
Is it? If it's been reduced by 50 to 75% and it's dark brown or black and crumbly and it looks
kind of like soil, then you're cooking with gas. Right. That's what my dad used to say.
The texture, did you say smoother or crumbly? Yeah. What about the smell? Well, it shouldn't
stink bad at this point. No, it should smell earthy. And actually, one of my favorites, the
actinomycites, the actinomycetes, they are the reason that soil and dirt has its smell. It's
those guys. They give it its earthy smell. Isn't that cool? Yeah. And I think we didn't mention
you know that it's doing well along the way if it stops smelling. Like it doesn't just stink the
whole time. Right. And it's not going to smell earthy. The soil that you add will smell earthy,
but when you grab a handful of humus, it should just fall through your fingers. It should be
the closer to black, the better. Yeah. And it should smell like everything associated with earth
should smell like it's like the word earth. That's what it should smell like. Like you'll
understand what earth smells like. Yeah. They said peat moss. If none of this makes sense.
Go to your local hardware store or lawn and garden center and smell the peat moss.
Exactly. So now that it's done, you've got your wonderfully natural fertilizer. Use it.
Put it, spread it out in your garden, spread it out around your trees, throw it in your yard.
Spread it around your naked body and run around your yard. If you want to.
That's what a doobie pile will make you do. Or quack grass.
Yes. Stay away from that stuff. It's basically the easiest way to put it without getting too
scientific is it's going to make everything better. It's going to increase soil microbes.
It's going to increase nutrients and enhance them. It's going to improve the pH and chemistry of your
soil, your yard, soil structure. And again, what you've just done is taken stuff and had it broken
down into its components, unlocked it for your plants to use. So your plants are going to say
thank you, brother. Pretty amazing. Some people create a lot of it and sell it, but mainly people
do this to just use around their house. Yeah. And increasingly towns are starting to do curbside
composting pickup, food waste pickup. Neat. Where you got trash, recycling bin, food waste bin.
Banana peels. Banana peels, right. That's it. All right. Go forth and compost. Yeah. If you
want to know more about composting, you can type that word in the search bar, howstoveworks.com.
Cornell actually also has a really great site about composting. If you want to know more about
the science of it. You were very excited about that site. Love that site. And since I said Cornell,
it's time for Listen to Mail. I'm going to call this Child Life Specialists.
We had a couple of these that wrote in. Remember we talked about this? In the pain
scale upset. And we kind of surmise what it was and it turns out we were right. And by the way,
we heard from paramedics, doctors, quite a few people about the worst pain. Yeah. You don't want
a long bone fracture. Yeah. Almost 100% of them said a broken femur is like the worst pain you
can experience. And should we say why? Yeah. Go ahead. So there are more reasons, right? We are
right because apparently it's a very sensitive area. But also because without that structure,
your muscles start spasming. Right. Which just rocks the whole thing back and forth even more.
And then in like fragmented bone, hitting nerve and like all kinds of badness. Yeah.
So steer clear of that. All right. So we heard from two. I'm going to read the one,
but I'm going to shout them both out. Hey guys, very excited to hear you mention Child Life
Specialist during your recent episode on pain scales. As a Child Life Specialist myself, I thought
we'd take the opportunity to tell you a little bit about our profession. You are right. Chuck,
a Child Life Specialist is we help kids deal with being hospitalized. That's really the essence of
our job. We support children and families throughout stressful situations, such as hospitalizations
using our knowledge of child development and play to facilitate coping. Child Life Specialists
provide children with developmentally appropriate education about diagnoses and treatments,
preparation and support for procedures and opportunities for normalization and play.
What a great job. Seriously. I can't think of too many jobs that are more rewarding than that.
Seriously. We also provide support for siblings and provide legacy building and memory making in
end of life situations. Our profession is very rewarding. Josh, you are right. She predicted
you would say that. I love going to work every day. Become a CLS. You must have a bachelor's
or master's degree in child development or a related field. Complete a 640-hour Child Life
internship and pass a national certification exam. You can visit www.childlife.org to learn more about
it. Thanks for what you guys do. You've made all my road trips interesting. Thanks for spreading
the word about Child Life. Maybe you can do an entire episode on our profession in the future.
She said future. Okay. That is Natalie Valentine and also a big shout out to Amanda Butler
from Auburn University who does that there. Thanks for writing in ladies. It sounds like
just a really, really great job. Yeah. Thanks to you both for that. Thanks for everybody who has
anything to do with making kids who are hospitalized feel better. Hats off to you. If you want to get
in touch with us, you can go on to StuffYouShouldKnow.com and check out our social links and you can
also send us a good old-fashioned email. Wrap it up, spank it on the bottom with some good old
country goodness and send it off to StuffPodcast at iHeartRadio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a
production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Badie. About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye,
bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than
any of us want to believe. You can find it in Major League Baseball, international banks,
K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject,
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about
to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.