perennials@hort.net
- Subject: RE: soil vs soil-less
- From: &* R* <1*@rewrite.hort.net>
- Date: Sat, 3 Sep 2016 17:33:20 -0700
I would add some compost and large grained sand. I really like the small pine chips( which sounds like what you had given to you) if I can find them too. Don't forget some lime sand if you are potting hellebores. Nancy Tennessee
To: perennials@hort.net Subject: soil vs soil-less Date: Sat, 3 Sep 2016 16:57:22 -0400 From: 1018@rewrite.hort.net A little off-topic but I am potting perennials so…
I mix my own potting soil, usually eyeballing it at 45% bagged top soil, 45% sphagnum peat, and 10% perlite. This gets adjusted if I happen to have compost or something else available, or if a plant needs it, I’ll add grit. And I always put in time-release fertilizer.
A guy just gave me 3 bags of top soil he got at Wal-Mart that he didn’t need. At a glance it seemed nicer than the usual cheap muck-based top soil I buy. But when I started using it, there didn’t seem to be any actual soil in the bag. I checked it and it is composed of Pine Fines, Hardwood Fines, Forest Fines, Forest Products, and a touch of Sand. Sand is a component of soil but fines have to break down before they become soil.
This seems like a good additive for my mix but it isn’t soil. There’s no clay and I depend on having some clay for cation exchange. So I’m mixing some of the muck brand top soil in with it but still wondering if this is going to be a good mix. I also cut back a bit on the sphagnum peat.
Maybe I’m overthinking this as nurseries use soil-less mixes all the time. But do you think my mix is ok for overwintering pots and do you think they should get away with labeling a bag as top soil when there is no soil in the bag?
Kitty |
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