Episode 2: Breaking Down Compost (Peace, Love & Pollinators) Compost is one of the most powerful tools we have for healthier soil, stronger plants, and more resilient landscapes, but it is also one of the most misunderstood. In this episode, we break compost down into what it actually is, what âgoodâ looks like, and how to use it without accidentally creating problems like nutrient overload, weeds, or contamination. Whether youâre a homeowner trying to build living soil in your yard, or a landscape pro looking for predictable results, this is a practical, no-fluff guide to getting compost right. In this episode, we cover What compost really is (and what it is not).The difference between compost, mulch, and topsoil.Why compost quality matters more than compost quantity.The biology behind decomposition, and why âfinishedâ compost behaves differently than raw organic matter.Carbon vs. nitrogen, and why balance is the whole game.What âhotâ compost means, and when itâs helpful or harmful.Common compost myths that lead to plant stress and disappointing results.How to apply compost for lawns, beds, trees, and new plantings.Red flags to watch for: sour smells, slimy texture, weed seeds, salts, persistent herbicides, and plastic contamination.Simple ways to evaluate compost quality before you spread it everywhere.How compost fits into a bigger soil-building protocol (not as a one-and-done fix).Key takeaways Compost is a soil amendment, not a replacement for soil.More compost is not always better. Consistency and quality win.Finished compost should smell earthy, crumble easily, and feel âalive,â not sour or ammonia-sharp.The best results come from pairing compost with good watering, proper mulching, and protecting soil structure.Clean inputs matter. Contamination is real, especially with municipal and commercial streams.Practical next steps Start small: trial a compost source in one bed before committing to your entire property.Match the compost to the job: a lawn topdress needs different texture and maturity than a planting bed.When in doubt, get it tested, or ask for documentation from the supplier.Resources mentioned (general) Compost maturity and stability (what to look for in finished product).Persistent herbicide contamination (aminopyralid/clopyralid) and why it matters.Soil testing basics if you want to avoid guessing.If you enjoyed this episode Subscribe to Peace, Love & Pollinators and share it with someone whoâs trying to âfixâ their yard with bags of compost and getting mixed results. If you have a compost question you want answered on a future episode, send it in, and weâll tackle it.