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Edited on Wed Apr-22-09 03:31 PM by HamdenRice
I can't even picture what you're describing. How did tree roots begin to grow in your compost? Is a tree growing out of it? Or do you mean you tried to compost some tree roots?
Off the top of my head, it sounds like you have wet soggy leaves. In my experience they are the main thing that can make a really big, hard, heavy lump of the kind you are describing. Leaves can get very soggy with rain. If the lump is black, that usually means it got wet and soggy and was decaying "anaerobically" instead of "aerobically". That just means that no air was getting to the decaying matter. If no air can get in, you don't get worms (which breath air) or aerobic bacteria. Anaerobic compost stinks; araerobic compost doesn't. You can save anaerobic compost by turning it and adding stuff.
And if it's cold where you are, could it be a frozen block of leaves and ice? Because normally compost doesn't get hard as a rock under any conditions.
Is this in a bin? A pile? How big is it? How old is it, if you haven't turned it in a long time?
My experience is that making good compost, sadly, is muscle intensive. If you are using one bin, it's a good idea to take it all out, mix it and put it back. At some point, you have to stop adding stuff so you get ripe compost that you can add to the garden.
I think I have to buy a second bin, because it's very hard to manage putting new stuff in with using ripe stuff. As long as you keep putting new stuff in, you don't get ripe compost.
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