First visit to GardenStew? Learn more Already a member? -> Sign in     Not a member yet? -> Register


Dead plants, what to compost



To hide these ads please register / sign in
Post Reply | Start New Topic | View printable version of this topic     




fish_4_all
Zone 8-9 Washington
Posts: 548
Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2010 5:23 am   Post subject: Dead plants, what to compost


I have lots of dead plants of course and need to know what I can or should compost and should not. Will the composting process kill diseases? Can I vermicompost the dead plants to kill viruses? Should I simply get rid of the tomato and pepper plants and not chance it? Any other plants I should not compost if there is a disease/virus threat?




To hide these ads please register / sign in
Back to top
Profile | PM | My Garden



Kay

Lincoln, Nebraska
Posts: 1114
Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 12:22 am   Post subject:


I never compost anything that has had any disease. Period.


_________________
Kay
To love what you do, and feel that it matters - how could anything be more fun?
Back to top
Profile | PM | My Garden | My Blog



Sjoerd

West - Friesland
Posts: 7021
Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 1:19 am   Post subject:


I agree with Kay's wise words 100%.


_________________
Sjoerd http://www.volkstuindersvereniginghoornenomstreken.nl/Page11.html
Back to top
Profile | PM | Website | My Garden



fish_4_all
Zone 8-9 Washington
Posts: 548
Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 8:00 am   Post subject:


None of them have had any that I know of. Just making sure I can compost anything that can get them. Have read and been told not to plant toms, peppers and other virus prone plants in the same place so I thought I would ask if you can tranfer disease through compost even if there was none.

So I guess I should ask is it safe to compost anything and everything as long as it doesn't have a disease or virus?

Back to top
Profile | PM | My Garden



marlingardener
Central Texas, zone 8
Posts: 2379
Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 3:05 pm   Post subject:


Yes, healthy plants that have given up the ghost are good for the compost pile. Chopping up the bigger ones into smaller pieces (like most tomato and pepper plants) will help them break down more quickly, but isn't absolutely necessary.


_________________
Mother Nature's helper
at www.rgf-tx.com
Back to top
Profile | PM | Website | My Garden | My Blog



daisybeans

annapolis md
Posts: 3675
Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 3:14 pm   Post subject:


I'm kind of funny about putting in the roots of stuff I wouldn't want to grow anywhere, like vines and things. Someone, I think it was Netty, suggested to put the stuff in a black plastic bag for a while to make sure they're good a dead (that sounds awful, doesn't it?) before putting them in the compost. That has worked well.


_________________
Daisybeans/MaryAnn

"Once the relation between poetry and the soil is well established in the mind, all growing things are endowed with more than material beauty." -Elizabeth Lawrence
Back to top
Profile | PM | My Garden | My Blog



Coppice
SE-OH USAian
Posts: 300
Posted: Sat Dec 25, 2010 10:01 am   Post subject:


I have had people make articulate and powerful arguments against building up bacterial and viral tomato diseases by composting spent tomato and pepper plants into composts that will return finished compost back into tomato-pepper growing beds.

All that said if you have a non-food or non-tomato bed that they can be sheet composted upon I cannot think (or been told) of a reason why it would hurt your tomatoes.

Some folks don't have enough space to rotate crops.

Back to top
Profile | PM | My Garden

To hide these ads
please register / sign in


Hi visitor! Need to ask a question? Sign up for free today.



Ways to share this page (copy and paste codes):
Simple link:
Forums:
HTML:






     Sponsored Links