Make Your GARDEN EXPLODE With THESE AMENDMENTS

in #homesteading6 years ago (edited)

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The original soil in the Ozark mountains is made up of clay and rocks and registers at about 5.7 PH on our homestead land. Not exactly the best soil for growing a garden right out of the gate. We are big believers of making your own soil or making your soil better by simply adding natural materials in the form of nitrogen (grass clippings, dead plants, straw, etc) and carbon (wood chips, saw dust compost, etc).

You can make some really good soil year after year by layering natural materials over the top of one another. However, you can really give your garden explosive potential by adding a few other natural materials. These natural editions to your garden will load up the soil and microbiology with minerals and nutrients only found in some of the most FERTILE LOCATIONS ON EARTH! We've been doing it now for 5 years and I can tell you that the more you vary the soil amendments, the more growth you will see in your garden.

  • AZOMITE

The first thing I always recommend especially for first time gardeners or for gardeners that are having growth issues in their garden is rock dust.

Some people (@shalomacres) like to tease me about putting this on my garden but I know this stuff works wonders for poor soil. (@ShalomAcres actually has amazing gardens so check out his page!) Have you ever stopped to ask yourself why places like Hawaii or other volcanic regions of the world are so fertile? Experts will tell you that it's because of the mineral content of volcanic ash in that area. And they would be right!

Azomite is pulled from the earth at an ancient volcanic ash deposit site in Utah. The ash is packed full of natural trace minerals. These micro nutrients give your soil and plants the equivalent of a dose of healthy vitamins. In turn, the plants use these vitamins to grow strong and ward off disease and pests and withstand adverse weathering and create a hardier plant overall. This is always my first recommendation for a new or struggling garden to build up soil potential.

  • Magnesium

Do you ever go out to your garden and find plants with yellowing leaves? Or maybe they are green but they are just not as bright as they could be.

This is a soil magnesium deficiency problem and the good news is that its common among gardeners. Because its common, there is a well known fix for this issue. You need some natural magnesium to put on your soil. We use Epsom salts for our garden by lightly spreading out some every year in the winter time over the soil before it is covered for the next spring planting.

Having this natural mineral in your soil will allow your plants to more easily distribute the chlorophyll around the leaves. This results in a healthier looking and stronger plant. The resulting fruit from the plant will also be healthier for you as well!

  • Bat Guano

I once had someone tell me that they would never grow their vegetable garden in any kind of poop and that it's not natural. They would only grow a garden in dirt.

I hated to burst their bubble, but that is what dirt is. Poop. Poop from insects (frass), poop from worms (castings), poop from birds, deer, rodents, and of course of broken down and decayed plant materials.

I believe the more kinds of poop you can add to your soil, the better your soil will be. We do compost humanure on our homestead but only reserve it for fruit trees and black berry vines. Bat Guano is proven to be some of the most plant favored nitrogen additions you can put on your garden. Yes, it can be expensive but you are benefiting your garden by adding yet another amazing nutrient your plants can use to grow. Even if you purchase a little and broadcast it thin, I think your plants will love it!

  • Coffee Grounds

Besides Azomite rock dust, coffee grounds are the top pick for me to put on my garden every year. And to think that many people just throw them away in the trash. If you want to boost worm activity in your soil, give them your left over coffee grounds.

We keep a bucket on our back deck and every day, drop our filter full of coffee grounds into the bucket. Little by little the bucket gets full and we empty the bucket come winter by spreading the contents over the hard frozen soil. We cover the soil with wood chips during the winter and begin the year long process of saving our coffee grounds for the next winter. When spring arrives, the coffee grounds soak into the ground and the worms go nuts for the caffeine and they reproduce faster and turn that soil into rich castings for your plants to use.

BOTTOM LINE TO EXCEPTIONAL GARDENING



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Photo by Laylita

THE SALAD

Think of your soil for the garden like a salad. Your base for the salad is one kind of lettuce. It's nice, but it's boring. So you add in a few other kinds of lettuce greens. Now the salad is getting a bit more interesting. So you add some small slices of carrots, some chopped onion, a few olives and diced tomatoes. Then top it off with a bit of cheese and a dressing and now you have a party in your salad bowl! The same is true with your garden. If you add different natural materials to your soil, you're enhancing it and helping the plants growing in it to have all the needed materials to produce for your salad.

You can't expect to have a green thumb by only planting in dirt. You need to care for the dirt and add to it to make it come alive with microbial activity and then sit back and watch the fantastic growth of nature!


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I like to pile the stuff in a nice tall mound and then let my chickens level it out. In addition to providing eggs, they are great little tillers that even add a bunch of their own nitrogen to the mix.

Yeah, chickens are good like that. They usually have free range over our garden after things have died down. They tear the soil up and add their little piles of goodness. It's not enough to make the soil hot...just enough to add some good nitrogen.

All of those are great amendments. I aren’t used any rock dust, as it’s rather expensive for a large area. I find wood ash provides all the minerals I need, plus it alkalinizes my slightly acidic soil. I also use a ton of leaves as they are so available here in MI. I use worm castings for seed starting, and compost my coffee grounds.

My soil is sandy with no rocks, so it’s much different from yours. I use some manures when I have access to them cheaply, usually cow or chicken, but I mainly use my urine for nitrogen if needed by the plants. I totally agree, the more diversity of elements you add to your soil, the more soil life it will support. Finding this elements in abundance and cheaply I think is the challenge.

Yes, we will add wood ash from our stove in the winter. It really help to mineralize the soil. There is some good stuff in there.

I grow my bonsai trees in lava so I know the benefits of that awesome stuff!
Sharing to twitter to get the word out!

We began our soil amendment by alkalizing. But we found later that our soil is already very alkaline, a ph of 8. Now we're acidifying our soil. We used unused coffee grounds (right from the can) to help acidify the soil for our raspberries and blueberries. We also used bone meal and blood meal to help with nitrogen levels. @ironshield

WAIT? You mean you put perfectly good coffee on the ground? AH!!!! I hope at least it was the cheap stuff. LOL :)

$4.00 cheap coffee. Keeps our berries perky and caffeinated. Especially in the morning. @ironshield

Now that’s how to treat your garden. I bet they don’t mind it’s the cheap stuff!

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wow..
thats a great post..
dont forget vote back and follow back

Great tips! I always find interesting tips in your posts I use for my garden.

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It was nice to read :) I look your new post soon :)

Hard to believe so much goes into fertilizing and keeping the pH of soil so good.
Guess I should have paid better attention in high school science classes!

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