DIY Potting Soil Recipe to Save Money
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Too hot also refers to the fact many of the bagged soil companies package their products while it is still composting and therefore is really hot (meaning temperature). This too often creates the "hot" youre speaking of. If you pick up a bag of soil thats indoors and you open it and stick your hand down to the middle and can feel it being very warm/hot then your soil was not properly composted before it was packaged, unless of course that bag has been sitting in the hot sun for days. So that being said , "hot soil" has two explanations and both can burn your plants.
What type of fertilizer is required . Thank you, very interesting article.
Started work in a garden nursery in gillingham kent in 1952,now my employer was Mr Featherby ,well known biologist ,who had huge greenhouses took me under his wing sent me to university for biology farm and forest which I passed ,I then became hie researcher ,now had a huge sterilizer for soil ,his own soil mixes for nearly all different plants ,tomatoes ,peligoniums,fruit tree cutting ,soft wood cuttings ,we had a menu for each type of plant and would mix the compost soil in a builders cement mixer ,adding bone meal blood ,nitrogen as we needed it ,great days but now 65 years later have forgotten those compost mixes , do you know them ,please reply still love gardening
I am doing 3 raised self watering containers (4ft by 8ft, 12 inches deep) and it says to use potting mix not garden or top soil having trouble trying to find out how much I need to get as most are all for raised beds using garden soil or small planters for potting mix. since composition is so different I am thinking it will be different. any help would be great as it appears it will be fairly expensive to fill as not sold in bulk?? thanks!
Hi, I live in northern part of India, where weather conditions are diverse. We have temperature range of 37 Deg F to 107 Deg F. So will the same mix serve purpose or should i change some ingradients.
Thanks.
I have used coffee grounds, tea leaves, crushed egg shells added to my potting mix to plant all my annuals. They seem to do really well here where I live, in the Tennessee area climate. I have these items daily so it stretches my potting mixture and adds lots of potassium and other minerals.
Hello! I see you鈥檙e from the TN area! I reside in Ohio 馃憢馃徎
I also see I鈥檓 a good couple years behind as you wrote your comment 4 years ago鈥 I see your comment said you add crushed egg shells, coffee grounds and tea leaves to your potting mix- may I ask do you start out with regular soil? I鈥檓 having trouble finding a base layer to mix into and I am planting some containers mostly but I want to spruce up my mailbox area as well as driveway area that had been previously dug up and planted near. On my 4th year and my thumb is almost fully green! I鈥檓 getting there! 馃槀 馃憤馃徎
馃尰 馃懇馃徎鈥嶐煂攫煣ゐ煂 馃憭 馃 鉂わ笍 馃尫
Can you use coco coir instead of peat moss? Would you use the same amount?
Yes, you can substitute coco coir for the peat moss using roughly the same amount. Coco coir and peat perform similarly when it comes to moisture retention.
If you do use coco coir instead of peat, be sure to leave out the lime as well. Otherwise, your soil will be too basic. (Coco coir has an almost-neutral pH, whereas peat is more acidic; lime is used to counter the peat.)