We are making numerous raised beds and have been playing around with various combinations of bagged garden soil, compost, etc. to fill them but this method is both expensive and providing less than perfect results. Just read a gardening book that talked about instead using a soil less mix involving three materials: compost, peat moss and vermiculite. I had no problems finding the first two but the vermiculite I can only find in very tiny and expensive bags. When you compare the vermiculite package with the peat moss package, it reads like both products do the same thing. So can I just use the peat moss mixed with the compost/manure to make my soil less mix?
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The mix needs to contain three basic types of ingredients: something to retain water (the peat moss in your recipe), something to provide nutrients (the compost in your recipe), and something to provide drainage (the vermiculite in your recipe). If you make a mix of just peat and compost, it may not drain well enough. Here are some ingredients that you could use for each of the three basic types: Retain Water
Nutrients
Drainage
I suppose if you use sand, it's maybe not technically a "soilless" mix, but I find that sand works well. A recipe that I use that works very well for plant-starting potting soil and costs very little; it would work well in raised beds:
Sometimes I'll mix in peat moss if the compost portion is more compost-y and not as manure-y. If you want to build a low-cost mix for new raised beds, look around your local area to see what you can get cheaply. In many areas, if you own a pickup, you can find a horse stable or a dairy farm where you can get free or cheap composted manure. (The last time I went "off farm" for manure, I paid $20 for a pickup-truck load of well-rotted cow manure that the farmer loaded for me with his tractor. I also made a few trips to horse farms where I had to shovel it on the truck, but it was free for the taking.) |
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Since I've watched "Back to Eden" about mulching with woodchips I'm convinced to give that a try. Why? Because it seems the most natural and logical thing to do. In nature there is no mix with peat, compost and vermiculite on a 1-1-1 basis. I would start with grassclippings, compost on top of that and mulch with woodchips. Add little manure on top and later on some bonemeal, bloodmeal or anything else when needed. Every next year, just some woodchips and little manure. To me, that's the most natural way to get good healthy soil. |
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You could try replacing vermiculite with expanded clay aggregate. It may be more available than vermiculite (here, in Poland, it is) and can provide the same function (drainage and loosening of the soil). |
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