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John Innes No3 and garden soil
Want to transfer a few plants to big garden pots to keep them there for the
long term. I was told a while ago that the composts you buy from garden centres do not contain all the minerals found in ordinary garden soil, so even if you feed the plants regularly they are still not getting all the necessary minerals. Would this apply to a compost like John Innes No 3 ? Or should I mix the John Innes half and half with ordinary garden soil? Novice grateful for any advice. |
#2
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John Innes No3 and garden soil
On Wed, 11 Sep 2013 12:08:41 +0100, Chris Hogg wrote:
On Wed, 11 Sep 2013 10:23:49 +0100, "T Bently" wrote: Want to transfer a few plants to big garden pots to keep them there for the long term. I was told a while ago that the composts you buy from garden centres do not contain all the minerals found in ordinary garden soil, so even if you feed the plants regularly they are still not getting all the necessary minerals. Would this apply to a compost like John Innes No 3 ? Or should I mix the John Innes half and half with ordinary garden soil? Novice grateful for any advice. All John Innes composts are loam (i.e. soil) based, with added peat, sand and fertilisers as appropriate. For long-term potting as you have in mind, JI3 should be fine, provided the plants you intend putting in there aren't ericaceous, e.g. rhododendrons, azaleas, camellias, summer-flowering heathers, and a few others, in which case you should use JI Ericaceous compost. However, any compost or soil in a pot, long-term, will lose fertility and need to be fed regularly once the initial food reserve has been exhausted. It's just that JI composts will retain their fertility longer than some other types. More info he http://www.johninnes.info/about.htm and he http://www.johninnes.info/technical.htm We have used JI3 for all our non-ericaceous container grown shrubs and plants for more than 15 years and have found it be an excellent medium. After a year or so carefully remove some of the top layer and replace it with fresh (we use the 'exhausted' stuff in the base of the deeper containers with shallow rooted plants). -- rbel |
#3
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John Innes No3 and garden soil
On 11/09/2013 10:23, T Bently wrote:
Want to transfer a few plants to big garden pots to keep them there for the long term. I was told a while ago that the composts you buy from garden centres do not contain all the minerals found in ordinary garden soil, so even if you feed the plants regularly they are still not getting all the necessary minerals. Would this apply to a compost like John Innes No 3 ? Or should I mix the John Innes half and half with ordinary garden soil? Novice grateful for any advice. What ever you use I'd add some of the water retaining crystals see http://apps.rhs.org.uk/advicesearch/...e.aspx?PID=692 |
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