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  2. How To Compost Leaves So They'll Enrich Your Garden's Soil - AOL

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    A leaf compost pile can be done in a designated compost bin or by making a heap, ideally shaded from wind so it doesn't blow away. "The level of nitrogen, the size of the leaf, and the moisture ...

  3. Composting in Winter: 10 Simple Tips for Keeping Your Pile Active

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    Here's how to keep composting in winter so you'll have finished compost in spring. Composting in Winter: 10 Simple Tips for Keeping Your Pile Active Skip to main content

  4. From weeding to fertilizing: What to know about Boise compost ...

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    Workers use large thermometers with 3-foot stems to check the internal temperature of the compost piles at multiple points in each windrow. Within just a few days, temperatures inside the stacks ...

  5. Ipomoea pandurata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ipomoea_pandurata

    Ipomoea pandurata, known as man of the earth, [1] wild potato vine, manroot, wild sweet potato, and wild rhubarb, [2] is a species of herbaceous perennial vine native to North America. It is a twining plant of woodland verges and rough places with heart-shaped leaves and funnel-shaped white flowers with a pinkish throat.

  6. Rheum palaestinum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheum_palaestinum

    Rheum palaestinum, the desert rhubarb, is a plant indigenous to Israel and Jordan with a highly developed system for gathering rainwater. [1] [2]The plant has broad, rigid leaves, with a waxy surface, and channels cut into them that funnel any water that drops onto them toward its root, with enough force to cause deep soil penetration. [3]

  7. Rumex sagittatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumex_sagittatus

    Rumex sagittatus, synonym Acetosa sagittata, commonly known as turkey rhubarb or rambling dock or potato vine, is a herbaceous perennial plant native to southern Africa, which has become a weed in Australia and New Zealand.

  8. Like all organisms, a compost pile thrives when two ... - AOL

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  9. Rheum rhabarbarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheum_rhabarbarum

    Rheum rhabarbarum was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753. [3] Linnaeus also described R. undulatum, but this is now considered to be the same species. [1]The name rha barbarum, Latin for 'foreign rha', was first used in the writings of Celsus, who uses the word to describe a valued medicinal root imported from the east.