Seems nearly everyone is having a shortage of good, organic dirt these days.
I have been hearing from a lot of my gardening friends about how this spring they will be needing to purchase quite a bit of organic dirt, but I have found a solution!
You can make your own healthy soil pretty easily by tossing some cardboard in the bottom of a container (or straight on the ground where you plan to plant), Then add manure, top with leaves, then sand or vermiculite, some kitchen waste, straw, more manure, more sand or vermiculite, more leaves, and repeating until full. It takes a bit to get great soil out of it (more of a start-in-the-fall type project), but I've done this with dirt in place of about half the manure & leaves in spring with good results. For regular ground instead of containers, forgoe the cardboard in spring projects and instead opt for two layers of newspaper as the first layer.
If you don't have a lot of kitchen scraps (we don't), you can contact your local grocer, and they will likely save their out-of-date produce for you if they know you are going to use it for compost or feeding animals, as it saves them on their trash bill while helping the enviornment. Most stores will jump at the opportunity.
Manure can be acheived free at most horse stables and cattle ranches, Leaves are free by the pre-packaged bag-full at area yard waste drop-off facilities, Shredded newspaper or peat moss can be used in place of leaves if necessary, and dirty straw can be found by contacting stables and animal shelters.
I still have to buy sand or vermiculite, but that is only because I am in the Ozarks, and there aren't a lot of great resources around here for those.
Warning: This soil will be high in nitrogen if created in the spring, and you may need to add some rock-based mineral ammendments to create the precise mix you want and lower the nitrogen content if desired. Then again, you might want some other ammendments anyway, depending on your prefrences.
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As an added soil bonus, some people like to sprinkle water absorbing polymers to their manure layer to increase water absorptopn and decrease the need for extra wateringin containers and during the hottest months.
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Newspaper spread over the top of your ground or container dirt after planting acts as a water-preserving mulch and also keeps most weeds from disturbing your gardening joy.
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Last year's holey hose works great (enlist the kids to poke lots more holes) as a drip irrigation system when strewn around the base of your plants.
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Get your repellants ready now!
Mix baking soda, cornmeal, roughly ground eggshells, and grits in equal parts, and keep it in a dry spot for sprinkling lightly under your plants to deter most fungi, cutworms, slugs, snails, and ants. Should require only 1-3 applications all season.
Make a gallon of spray by making a tea of 20 teaspoons ground red pepper and a gallon of water. After straining, add 10 teaspoons of organic natural castille soap and mix thoroughly. Pour your mix into a spray container and mist your plants weekly or after each rain (tomatos may require more frequent spraying). Be sure to get underneath the leaves with each application. The hot pepper repells most plant eating animals and some insects, while the soap eats away the protective oils from other insects like ants & aphids.
For extra light in low-light areas and additional bug deterrant under your plant's leaves, place some aluminum foil, shiny side up around the base of the plant.
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If your neighborhood has a problem with Japanese Beetles, don't buy a trap for your yard, buy one for each of the neighbors down the street on either end from you. The traps send out a pheremone that attracts the beetles from as much as 5 miles away. Wouldn't you rather your neighbor had them going over there instead of coming to your yard? Bonus: The neighbor will think you are awefully nice to buy traps for them to help them fight the battle, and it really does help in controlling the neighborhood population. *grin*
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That's it for gardening tips and tricks today! Take care, and enjoy your spring!


Comments: 24
Three years ago, I never would have beleived that I'd be out working to increase my food waste beyond what my family creates, but here I am doing just that for this spring.
"Pardon me, but would you happen to have any spare plant-based food garbage you could part with?" Just sounds too funny.
I would love to hear organic ant solutions. I put chili pepper powder on my window sill (real pretty) and I take boiling water and pour it outside around the areas where they enter the house. Any other great solutions?
I put geraniums close by but not to close to the garden and the Japanese beetles attract them instead of the veggies. The geranium will return to a good looking plant when brought in for winter and can be reused the next year.
I worked at a grocery and they could not give any out of date food to anyone due to insurance. If you eat it and get sick, you could sue them. You may get lucky but where I live it is not possible to get scraps from them. I would ask friends to send me some. I keep mine in the house for a couple of days in a large canister and take them out when it gets full. I have also made some compost indoors in a canister. It worked quite well and did not take very long.
Either way, I am talking about the instant grits you can get at the grocery store in the cereal section near the hot cereals.
Most Starbucks package their coffee grounds for eager composters. You might have to figure out the best pick-up times, but sometimes if you ask, they bag it up for you, in my experience. Other coffee shops will probably do it too if you ask. I top-dress my citrus trees with it, and thought it odd they attract squirrels. My friend said, "Duh, they need their caffeine fix!" The squirrels leave peanut shells on top of the coffee grounds.
I am worried about being taxes out of my house because I can't find work, but I would miss my back yard.
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thanks!
I'm passing it on.