For many people, composting is just an  alternative way of dealing with rubbish.   It prevents the garbage bin from getting full and smelly.  It’s also a way of disposing of grass  clippings and leaves, which saves many trips to the garbage depot.  Whilst these things are valid, they are not  giving compost the full credibility it deserves.  Compost can be very valuable when used in the  right way.
I have a completely different way of  looking at compost.  To me, composting is  a way of building valuable nutrients that will, one day, feed me and my family.  I only use compost on my vegetable gardens.  The way I manage my vegetable gardens means  that composting is an integral part of the whole food production system.  I create compost as a way of collecting  nutrients in one form (waste), and turning them into another form (food).  
The average person buys food from a shop,  consumes it and then sends the waste away.   This is simply buying nutrients, taking what you need for that precise moment,  and disregarding the remainder.  It’s a  nutrient flow that only flows in one direction, like a fancy car roaring down  the road.  You admire the car for a  moment, but after a second or two, it’s gone.
My goal is to slow down the car and then  get it to do a U-turn.  I want to keep  the nutrients within my property where I can capitalize on them.  By doing this, I am able to use the nutrients  again, so I don’t have to buy them for a second time.  Surely, that’s going to save me money.  It may seem strange to think of nutrients in  this way when we can’t even physically see them.  However, all organic materials contain  nutrients.  My goal is to get those  nutrients out of the form they are in and into a form that is useful to me and  my family.  
To put it in a different way; composting is a vehicle in which we are able  to create a nutrient cycle within our property.  We are part of that cycle because we consume  the nutrients when they are, for a brief time, in a useful form.  Then they return to the compost and slowly  make their way into another useful form where we consume them again.  This cycle can go on and on  indefinitely.  Of course, there will be  many lost nutrients that you will never see again, but with a little diligence,  you will be surprised at how much compost you can create, and hence, how many  valuable nutrients you can recycle.  
My composting system is large because I  have a few large vegetable gardens.  I  believe that the size of your vegetable garden should be determined by how much  compost you can create, and not merely by the amount of space you have in your  backyard.  To run a rich, high yielding  vegetable garden you need to have some sort of soil conditioning plan, and the  best thing for your soil is a generous layer of good compost on the surface a  few times per year.  
If you can create your own compost from the  organic waste that you generate in your everyday life, then you can have a  vegetable garden that is self-sustainable.   Once it is set up, it will never need nutrients in the form of  store-bought fertilizers.  You will have established  a flow of nutrients, and your nutrient-store will grow bigger and bigger, year  after year.  Applying compost to your  garden will have a very positive effect on your soil structure and  fertility.  With good soil structure and  plenty of organic material, you will be able to release nutrients that have  been locked up and unavailable to your plants.   You will be speeding up the flow of nutrients, thus increasing your  yield significantly.  Your soil will  become alive and healthy with micro-organisms and soil bacteria that are beneficial  to creating the conditions for proper plant growth.  Your vegetables will contain all the  essential nutrients in the correct proportions, giving your body the vitamins  and minerals it needs to function at its best.
Composting is very easy once you make it  part of your everyday life.  A small  container on your kitchen bench to collect scraps and a daily trip to the  compost bin is all it takes.  It’s a  small effort for huge rewards.  The  golden rule in making compost is never to have large clumps of a single type of  material.  Thin layers of hot and cold  materials work best.  Cold materials  include leaves, shredded newspaper and dried grass clippings.  Hot materials include fresh grass clippings,  manures, weeds, discarded soft plants and kitchen scraps. 
If you make composting part of you daily  routine, along with an effective method of growing food, you can literally save  thousands of dollars per year.  This is  possible simply because you won’t have to keep buying nutrients over and  over.  You will buy them once, hold onto  them and then convert them into useful forms again and again.  It’s that simple!
Jonathan White is an Environmental  Scientist and the founder of the Food4Wealth Method, a high yielding,  low-maintenance form of vegetable gardening.   For more information see www.Food4Wealth.com
