St. Phatty
Active member
once I belonged to a community garden that belonged to a church. They let some landscape contractor dump wood chips on a spare acre.
It was really interesting to watch what happened when it rained.
All the different mixes of wood chips would start steaming, some more than others.
So I picked my wood chips from the hottest pile, and used that to make some truly primo soil.
I mixed it with a cubic yard of wildflowers, and a few cubic feet of orange berries, and about 100 pounds of potatoes.
Also a bunch of health food store garbage, like pulp from making smoothies.
Hope you can get some Primo wood chips for your garden.
The carbon sucking/ alteration of chemistry is very much related to particle size. Sawdust will react a lot faster than wood chips.
If you can maybe do one compost pile with sawdust and one with wood chips. There should be some difference.
Normally I would think the wood chip one would be more useful but you never know.
It was really interesting to watch what happened when it rained.
All the different mixes of wood chips would start steaming, some more than others.
So I picked my wood chips from the hottest pile, and used that to make some truly primo soil.
I mixed it with a cubic yard of wildflowers, and a few cubic feet of orange berries, and about 100 pounds of potatoes.
Also a bunch of health food store garbage, like pulp from making smoothies.
Hope you can get some Primo wood chips for your garden.
The carbon sucking/ alteration of chemistry is very much related to particle size. Sawdust will react a lot faster than wood chips.
If you can maybe do one compost pile with sawdust and one with wood chips. There should be some difference.
Normally I would think the wood chip one would be more useful but you never know.