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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"?
Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks |
#2
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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
On 4/10/2008 11:59 AM, ewl wrote:
What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"? Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks I call it "potting mix" because I mix it myself. I don't think "soil" would be correct because, in my case, there is no soil from the garden in it. My recipe is at http://www.rossde.com/garden/garden_potting_mix.html. -- David E. Ross Climate: California Mediterranean Sunset Zone: 21 -- interior Santa Monica Mountains with some ocean influence (USDA 10a, very close to Sunset Zone 19) Gardening pages at http://www.rossde.com/garden/ |
#3
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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
On Thu, 10 Apr 2008 11:59:46 -0700 (PDT), ewl
wrote: What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"? Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks This is an interesting question. I used to make my own potting soil (garden soil, peat moss, vermiculite, whiting). It had to be screened, mixed, baked and fluffed. It is so much easier to buy bags of general potting soil or soil "mixes" formulated for specific plants (cactus, African violets, orchids, etc). I guess few gardeners make their own potting soil today, but it is no more difficult than baking a cake. |
#4
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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
On Apr 10, 6:57 pm, Phisherman wrote:
On Thu, 10 Apr 2008 11:59:46 -0700 (PDT), ewl wrote: What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"? Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks This is an interesting question. I used to make my own potting soil (garden soil, peat moss, vermiculite, whiting). It had to be screened, mixed, baked and fluffed. It is so much easier to buy bags of general potting soil or soil "mixes" formulated for specific plants (cactus, African violets, orchids, etc). I guess few gardeners make their own potting soil today, but it is no more difficult than baking a cake. I hate peat moss because pH can drop to 5.0 within a month unless I dump in a ton of lime. So much better to concoct my own mix, from a coco coir base if I can get it or equal parts homegrown vermicompost and vermiculite. Doing without salt-based fertilizers means I can reuse the soil instead of dumping it at season's end. Has anyone found bagged mixes that _aren't_ fertilized or based on peat? |
#5
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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
"ewl" wrote in message
... What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"? Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks 2nd question response. Sandy loam, pine bark 5%, food green leftovers. Stew for a month in warm weather, keep it moist. Bear in mind that "sandy loam" is difficult to get a consistent definition for. -- Dave |
#6
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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
In article
, Father Haskell wrote: On Apr 10, 6:57 pm, Phisherman wrote: On Thu, 10 Apr 2008 11:59:46 -0700 (PDT), ewl wrote: What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"? Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks This is an interesting question. I used to make my own potting soil (garden soil, peat moss, vermiculite, whiting). It had to be screened, mixed, baked and fluffed. It is so much easier to buy bags of general potting soil or soil "mixes" formulated for specific plants (cactus, African violets, orchids, etc). I guess few gardeners make their own potting soil today, but it is no more difficult than baking a cake. I hate peat moss because pH can drop to 5.0 within a month unless I dump in a ton of lime. So much better to concoct my own mix, from a coco coir base if I can get it or equal parts homegrown vermicompost and vermiculite. Doing without salt-based fertilizers means I can reuse the soil instead of dumping it at season's end. Has anyone found bagged mixes that _aren't_ fertilized or based on peat? Close but no cigar. Bill http://www.johnnyseeds.com/catalog/p...earch&search=9 227&item=9227 -- Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA MaCain in 2038 !! http://www.ted.com/ |
#7
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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
On 4/10/2008 7:06 PM, Father Haskell wrote:
On Apr 10, 6:57 pm, Phisherman wrote: On Thu, 10 Apr 2008 11:59:46 -0700 (PDT), ewl wrote: What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"? Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks This is an interesting question. I used to make my own potting soil (garden soil, peat moss, vermiculite, whiting). It had to be screened, mixed, baked and fluffed. It is so much easier to buy bags of general potting soil or soil "mixes" formulated for specific plants (cactus, African violets, orchids, etc). I guess few gardeners make their own potting soil today, but it is no more difficult than baking a cake. I hate peat moss because pH can drop to 5.0 within a month unless I dump in a ton of lime. So much better to concoct my own mix, from a coco coir base if I can get it or equal parts homegrown vermicompost and vermiculite. Doing without salt-based fertilizers means I can reuse the soil instead of dumping it at season's end. Has anyone found bagged mixes that _aren't_ fertilized or based on peat? Many flowering plants prefer an acidic environment. Since the water in my area is alkaline, an acidic mix (per my recipe) is quite appropriate. The native soils are even more alkaline. I rarely see lime at any of the nurseries I visit. -- David E. Ross Climate: California Mediterranean Sunset Zone: 21 -- interior Santa Monica Mountains with some ocean influence (USDA 10a, very close to Sunset Zone 19) Gardening pages at http://www.rossde.com/garden/ |
#8
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Potting Soil vs. Potting Mix
On Apr 11, 12:45 pm, "David E. Ross" wrote:
On 4/10/2008 7:06 PM, Father Haskell wrote: On Apr 10, 6:57 pm, Phisherman wrote: On Thu, 10 Apr 2008 11:59:46 -0700 (PDT), ewl wrote: What is the difference between "Potting Soil" and "Potting Mix"? Also, if you were to make your own potting mix or potting soil what would it consist of? Thanks This is an interesting question. I used to make my own potting soil (garden soil, peat moss, vermiculite, whiting). It had to be screened, mixed, baked and fluffed. It is so much easier to buy bags of general potting soil or soil "mixes" formulated for specific plants (cactus, African violets, orchids, etc). I guess few gardeners make their own potting soil today, but it is no more difficult than baking a cake. I hate peat moss because pH can drop to 5.0 within a month unless I dump in a ton of lime. So much better to concoct my own mix, from a coco coir base if I can get it or equal parts homegrown vermicompost and vermiculite. Doing without salt-based fertilizers means I can reuse the soil instead of dumping it at season's end. Has anyone found bagged mixes that _aren't_ fertilized or based on peat? Many flowering plants prefer an acidic environment. Since the water in my area is alkaline, an acidic mix (per my recipe) is quite appropriate. The native soils are even more alkaline. I rarely see lime at any of the nurseries I visit. Baltimore's tap water is 7.5. Still, every time I use peat-based mixes, they go to 4.5 within a month despite stabilization with dolomite at 1 cup per gallon soil. |
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