Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Environmental Leader and Innovator | Page 15

From mid-May into June, compost creation begins with feedstock consisting of landscape waste. The collected items are shredded and mixed, and then turned over every three days for two to three weeks. The compost mix is monitored to maintain steady moisture and a temperature of 131F that ensures weed seeds and pathogens are killed. Subsequently, the mix is moved to another area to finish cooking and then to cool. Landscape maintenance and composting continues throughout July, August, and September. Turf is mulched in place in most areas. Grass clippings are collected from a small number of sites to pump nitrogen into the compost. Waste from small shrub pruning also becomes compost feedstock. Near the end of October, leaf pickup begins. For more than a decade, Mount Auburn has been using mowers fitted with mulching (Gator) blades to mulch leaves where they fall. Allowing the chopped material to decompose in place raises the organic-matter component of the soil and reduces the need for synthetic fertilizers. In addition, about 1,200 cubic yards of leaves are collected in a designated area in the recycling yard and turned monthly for a year. Eventually the aged leaves are used for mulch, added to topsoil, and serve as a carbon feedstock for compost. The finished compost made during the summer is screened during the fall and then used for top-dressing new graves, for fertilizing turf areas, and in potting mixes. A small amount of compost is used to brew compost teas, in which a stew of compost and water promotes the rapid reproduction of beneficial bacteria and fungi. Using compost teas, we can deliver these microorganisms to more areas of soil than we could reach by broadcasting or spreading solid compost. In just two years, Walker managed to change the habits of the grounds crew; to create an efficient operating recycling yard; to develop recipes for compost and topsoil that are suited to Mount Auburn’s landscape; to purchase equipment of appropriate scale for Mount Auburn’s manufacturing operations; and to eliminate materials costs for topsoil, compost, and mulch—an overwhelming success. tween 10 and 20%. More recent soil testing at Mount Auburn has shown a slight improvement in the organic-matter con- tent, and we expect it to continue an upward trend. The words of Dr. Jacob Bigelow—medical doctor, botanist, and co-founder of Mount Auburn Cemetery—remind us that decomposition is an essential part of the great cycle of life. “What has once possessed life is most assimilated to the living character, and most ready to partake of life again,” Bigelow opined in 1831. “The plant which springs from the earth, after attaining its growth and perpetuating its species, falls to the ground, undergoes decomposition and contributes its remains to the nourishment of plants around it…Were it not for this law of nature, the soil would soon be exhausted, the earth’s surface would become a barren waste, and the whole race of organized beings, for want of sustenance, would become extinct.” Organic Matter How has the soil responded? Twenty years ago, Mount Auburn’s soil testing was predominantly focused on turf conditions and the physical properties of sand, silt, and clay components; acidity (pH) was measured, as were the proportions of five macronutrients and nine micronutrients for growing particular crops or landscape plants. The initial 2004 testing found an average of 6.1% organic-matter in the soil. While this figure fell within the range of 4–10% that the state extension office recommends for most plants, we felt the organic content could be coaxed higher. For example, at Arnold Arboretum, where grass clippings have never been collected, organic-matter content ranges be- This aerial view shows a part of the Mount Auburn landscape many visitors have never seen. Located next to our greenhouse, our recycling center is responsible for processing more than 400 yards of mulch and 125 yards of loam. Get the full story online: www.mountauburn.org/ sweet-auburn-summer-2014/ Summer 2014 | 13