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You are here: home > soil & compost
Soil Testing for New Gardens
Creating and building a new garden bed is an exciting time. When you are building a new garden, soil testing is an important step to ensure that your choice plants will thrive and grow over the years. Soil testing is inexpensive and you should never underestimate the importance of this step.Apr. 11, 2006

Adding Nutrients to the Soil
Testing your soil is going to reveal to you what type of nutrients are lacking. The value of realizing what nutrients are in your soil or that are lacking in your soil is going to be what makes your garden thrive. Different types of nutrients are going to be read in a soil test. Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium levels are among the most common nutrients tested.Apr. 11, 2006

Bits about Fertilizers
I have very poor soil where I live, which is one of the reasons why I started using fertilizer in my gardens. I find that I must better my soil or my plants will not continue to thrive after I take them out of the greenhouse. Here is a little about how I use fertilizers in my gardens and for my plants.Apr. 11, 2006

Manure for your Garden
While not many hobby gardeners like to talk about manure, it can be the most important ingredient to keep plants healthy and thriving with nutrients. Depending on what area of the country you live in you might be used to using a certain type of manure on your gardens. Some of the most common types of manure used on both flower and vegetable gardens are cow manure, horse manure, sheep, pig manure and even chicken manure.Apr. 11, 2006

Sawdust in the Garden
Before adding anything to your gardens you should test your soil to learn what it may be lacking or what you need to add to balance the soil's nutrients. Testing your soil yourself is actually quite easy. You can find soil testers at your local home store that only cost a few dollars and they come with very easy to read charts to help you understand what your results mean.Apr. 10, 2006

Fertilizer Basics
Your soil is the basis for all your gardens, whether a container garden, window garden or outdoor garden. The soil that you plant in contains nutrients, minerals, and materials that plants need to make them grow properly. Over time, your soil will be depleted of these materials and nutrients and you'll need to fertilize the soil, your gardens and your plants for them to continue to thrive.Apr. 10, 2006

Adding Nutrients to the Soil
Testing your soil is going to reveal to you what type of nutrients are lacking or in surplus. The value of realizing what nutrients are in your soil or that are lacking in your soil is going to be what makes your garden thrive and produce.Apr. 6, 2006

Composting Made Easy
Gardeners are constantly trying to cut costs in their gardening hobby. Improving soil and adding nutrients means composting. Composting not only is a great way to improve your soil and cut costs, but composting is also means of recycling items that otherwise would be rotting in a landfill somewhere.Apr. 6, 2006

Choosing Soil
Growing plants, vegetables and flowers is more than just putting a seed in a pot and watching it grow. There are many conditions that will affect how and when your garden grows including temperature, water availability and the soil that your plants are growing in.Apr. 6, 2006

Soil for Containers
You find soil in you yard, in other containers, and out when you are walking the road that could realistically be good to use in your container gardening- but how are you going to know whether this is the right soil for your specific gardening needs? Let's look a little closer into the attributes needed for healthy container soil, and where you can find the best soil for your container planting.Apr. 6, 2006

Germinating Mediums
Starting seeds will require a good growing medium that will help the seed along in germinating. A few of the different growing and germinating mediums that you can use are peat moss, sphagnum moss, vermiculite, perlite, sand and of course soil. Here we are going to discuss briefly the differences between these growing mediums.Apr. 6, 2006

Manure in the Cold Frame / Hot Bed
You have been building your cold frame or planning a hot bed, and now is the time to start thinking about the types of soil you are going to use for growing and keeping your vegetables and plants. Not only are you going to have to think about what your plants like, such as high potassium, low nitrates, loose soil, heavy soil, or a moist soil, you also need to think about the heat that will be given off with the types of soil that you choose.Apr. 6, 2006
Improving Soil

Adding Inorganic Material to Your Garden

Changing the pH Levels

Composting Methods

Cultivating and Mixing Soil