Here are a few points for people that want to amend their soil and use it again.
1.Bigger is better! Bigger is also relative. Anything I do now, in growing cannabis, is microscopic compared to what I used to do at the farm. The larger the amount of media being cooked, will have more of the media in that sweet zone of heating up and will sustain that temperature for a longer time. It's not only the temperature you're looking for, it's also the duration. There is kinda a certain amount of material you need 4 the composting to be effective, kind of like critical mass in a nuclear reaction. All the biological activity causes heat and with larger amounts of material, back material insulates the heat transfer and you retain more of the temperature. This allows the core of the composting material to reach sterilization temperatures.
2. Make a quality compost tea and use that to bring the cooking material up to proper moisture level. You're supplying that amended media with a bunch of microbes to eat that amendments up you just added.
3. Plain and simple, it's best done in the summertime. The good microbes love the heat! The colder it is, the longer the process will take and the smaller your core will be. In the winter time, the larger amount of bulk material becomes more important . In other words, if you do a small batch, it's not gonna reach the temperatures needed.
4. Try to begin this process as soon as you can from finishing the run. Try to harvest the girls when the media is not soaking wet, so that you can add the compost tea and the necessary microbes. This way you will have an even larger food source for the microbes you're introducing.................... That big old root system! You can fire a tote up just from having the bacteria eat up the old root system.
4.If the media you're amending now is a bit heavy, now is the time to add the material you're going to use for aeration. It'll help supply the bacteria with the oxygen that they need.
There's a ton of other things that you can do, but you have to have the basics.