Compost can be used as a substitution for fertilizer in vegetable and flower beds even when plants are actively growing in them as long as you can see bare soil. Apply the compost to the soil between the plants or between rows and water it in.
Compost can be applied to the soil surface and watered into the soil and act like a fertilizer |
Compost can be applied to fruit trees in a circle around the trees under the canopy where the soil is wet. The compost should not be piled against the trunks of the trees.
Compost can be applied around desert landscape plants on top of coarse rock mulch. If the rock is coarse enough, it can be washed onto the surface of the soil under the plant canopy through the rocks with a hose. It is best if straight compost does not come in contact directly with soft succulent plants or young trees.
Compost tea brewer, top, and applying compost tea with an injector directly into the soil. |
Compost can also be put in with pure water and allowed to "seep" just like tea in a tea bag. The water separated from this combination, compost tea, can be used as a liquid fertilizer and in some cases helps reduce disease problems in the soil or when used as a spray on the foliage. After the tea has been made the compost can still be used as a soil amendment, but, of course, wit;h a lower nutrient content.
Be careful, though, the type of compost used can make this tea solution very concentrated and can harm plants unless it is diluted with water. It is good to use a salinity meter to judge whether it is safe to apply to foliage directly without dilution or knowing how much to dilute it. The salmity of the compost tea should be below 4 mmhose/cm or dS/m.