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Peat MossThis is the brown spongy stuff sold in bags at the garden center. It might cost a little of your allowance to buy, but it does a good job of helping both clay and sandy soils. One little tip.
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Peat pellets can be transferred directly to planters or to outdoor gardens where they, too, add peat's richness and aerating properties to the soil.
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A pot made of peat - usually used for starting seedlings. The entire pot may be planted where it will break down in the soil Definition as written by Magpye: Compressed peat into a pot that can be used for starting seeds.
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Peat pellets are made of compressed peat that expands to seven times its volume when watered. Available in 2 sizes ("Jiffy-7's" and "Jiffy-9's"), they resemble ginger cookies when dry and lumpy muffins when expanded.
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Peat Nowadays increasing concern at the environmental damage caused to wetland habitats by peat extraction means that responsible gardeners are using alternatives. Anyway, peat contains almost no nutrients and breaks down quickly.
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Peat: Peat of course is an excellent soil type and it should not need the addition of any organic matter. It is prone to be an acid soil however and so the careful addition of lime may be necessary to restore its ph balance.
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PEAT MOSSA 2- to 3-inch layer of peat moss gives fair to good weed control. However, peat tends to form a crust if used in layers thick enough to hold down weeds. It is very difficult to wet and tends to blow away if applied dry.
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Peat-based composts are ideal for larger-seeded herbs like Fennel and Angelica. Smaller-seeded kinds are much better in those soil-less composts that have sand mixed in with the peat. No matter what the preference may be, always use a good ...
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Peat moss (figure C) is excellent when you mix it with soil because it helps retain water. Underground, it helps the roots drink the water. However, when used as a mulch on top, peat holds water sometimes 600 times its weight.
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Peat moss is cheap and works well to loosen the soil. It is also very dusty. Wet it first to make it easier to work with.
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Peat - Partially degraded vegetable matter found in marshy areas. Peat is commonly used as asoil amendment.
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Peat mossO, low in nutrients Highly moisture absorbent, slow to decompose. Mix thoroughly with other materials, add in small quantities. If possible, soak peat moss in warm water before adding to pile.
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PEAT (Feat moss in the U.S) -- Partially decomposed sphagnum moss or sedge used in making composts. Valuable for its pronounced air- and water-holding capacity and its freedom from weeds and disease organisms.
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Peat alter nativeDo you use a lot of potting mix with added peat moss for your containers? If so, you may worry that peat bogs can’t keep up with the demand. Use coconut coir instead.
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Bag of peat moss Knife Shovel Lay a bag of peat moss on its side. Make several diagonal slits in the bag, starting halfway up and working upwards.
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If the peat does dry out, try this remedy from John Begeman, agriculture and natural resources agent at the University of Arizona: Add a few drops of liquid dishwashing detergent to a quart of water; then water slowly with this solution.
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Thin clays and peat earths are more friendly to the growth of oats than of other grains, though in favorable seasons a heavy crop of wheat may be obtained from a thin clayey soil, when it has been completely summer- fallowed and enriched with dung.
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Sow seeds one inch (2.5 centimetres) deep in individual peat pots two to four weeks before the expected last frost in your area.
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We can amend the soil with peat, manure humus and compost (preferably all of the above) and till it in to a good 12"depth OR we can build the raised bed again and have total control of what our soil is like! ...
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Some people mulch with just peat moss, which eventually does decompose and help with soil building. But peat moss that is allowed to dry sheds rain like a shingle, which doesn't get the needed moisture to the roots of your herbs.
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Eucharis - Store bulbs in peat at 68 F (20°C). To induce flowering, the growing plants must receive at least four weeks at 80-85°F (27-29°C) followed by a minimum temperature drop of 14°F (8°C), e.g., down to 65-70°F (18-21°C).
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I also recall the small grow pots made of compressed peat that I used to propagate tomatoes, cabbages, eggplants, and peppers for several years in the small lean-to greenhouse by Lord & Burnham that we assembled and attached to my outdoor kitchen.
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Plant the tubers "eyes up" indoors in early spring in flats of peat moss and sand. Place the trays in a dark location at 65 F until 1" tall shoots appear.
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When seedlings are three or four inches tall, it's time to transplant them into individual peat pots or packs that hold several plants each. Feed them every two weeks (weekly for wave petunias) with diluted liquid fertilizer.
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The mix may contain different proportions of peat, perlite, vermiculite, sand, small bark, and so on. These are very open and porous mixes, and are excellent for their purpose. BUT.
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Fill the box with slightly moistened sand, peat moss or vermiculite and place it in a cool, dry location with temperatures that remain between 45 and 55 degrees F. Check tubers periodically through winter for rotting and drying out.
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See also: Plant, Soil, Water, Moss, Peat moss
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