Digging, mud and manure are not things that I have ever relished about gardening.  Some people find it very therapeutic to get dirt under their fingernails and turn over every square inch of their soil at least once a year.  Not me.  I started life as a bit of an indoor child and moved on to computer  programming, so it’s been quite a surprise to find myself enjoying growing food  outdoors.
But there’s one thing that does motivate me to get my hands  dirty: compost.  For many gardeners compost  is a sort of side-benefit from the big heap of old weeds in the corner of the  garden.  But I like to be far more methodical  about it.  Search the Internet and you  will discover that there is a whole science of compost and even a variety of  recipes.  In fact, it really is a bit  like cooking – there’s an art to finding the right ingredients, producing the best  mix and getting it to ‘bake’.  With the  right attention a compost heap can reach temperatures of 158 degrees Fahrenheit (70 degrees Celsius)  which  has two important advantages:
![Worms in compost]() 
  - The compost is ready in about a third of the  usual time, meaning that you can start it off in fall and have it ready to  use the next spring
- At these higher temperatures the weed seeds that  inevitably form part of the compost mix will be sterilized
So what are the magic ingredients?  There’s some very good advice at Garden  Organic’s website   but a basic summary is:
  - A good mixture of ‘green’ material (weeds,  remains of plants, grass cuttings, vegetable peelings etc) and some ‘brown’  material (sawdust, shredded woody plants, leaves)
- The right amount of water: it should feel damp  but not soggy
- For the best results, the heap should be  approaching 35 cubic feet in size and built in one go.  Materials to go in can be stored up for a few  weeks and then mixed together.  This  ensures that it’s all heating up at the same time which helps you to achieve  higher temperatures
- Air – never squash down a compost heap and aim  to turn it over with a garden fork each week for the first few weeks.  Having a couple of compost bins next to each  other can make this much easier - you just fork the material from one bin into  the other one
- The smaller the materials can be chopped the  better the results. A shredder is ideal but does take a lot of time
![Compost thermometer]() 
If you want to get very scientific about it you can purchase  a compost thermometer which has a long probe that you can plunge into the heap  to see how hot it gets (yes, I have one!)   But the most satisfying thing for me is plunging in a garden fork on a cold  autumn morning.   It is very satisfying  to watch the steam rise as if by magic from nothing more than scraps of garden  waste.