raccoon
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Wed Jan-20-10 01:13 PM
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| The soil where I live is red clay, and I've heard it's very acidic. |
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I've been putting coffee and tea grounds (which are also acidic) on plants. Do you all think I need to put something else that isn't acidic on them?
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Kolesar
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Wed Jan-20-10 08:39 PM
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| 1. Buy a soil pH and nutrient test kit at the "garden center" |
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It will tell you if you have to add lime to increase the pH. The kit will tell you whether you need nitrogen, phosphorous, and/or potassium. Coffee grounds are a good source of nitrogen, by the way.
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tsuki
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Mon Feb-01-10 07:46 AM
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| 2. We had our soil tested by the county agriculture extension office. |
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It cost us $7 per plot to get a detailed work-up that included ph. Husband also found out about a master gardening course being given, and the cost is the price of the books. He starts tomorrow.
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NRaleighLiberal
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Thu Mar-25-10 11:44 PM
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| 3. We've been dealing with red clay - live in Raleigh. It's pretty good, actually, |
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once you get some organic material worked in. It holds water and nutrients quite well. Work in lots of compost - leaves, clippings, etc. It certainly isn't ideal soil (we liked the rich, dark mushroom compost-enriched garden we had much better when we lived in PA)....we've also done lots of container gardening to avoid diseases on our tomatoes (since we can't rotate crops very much).
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MajorChode
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Mon Apr-05-10 03:02 PM
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Some trees and shrubs love acidity. I have the opposite problem in Texas as my soil has a high PH. As a result I can't grow certain types of oak trees, azaleas, and other low PH loving plants.
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DU
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Sat Nov 01st 2025, 05:41 AM
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