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Peat

Gardening Pear slugPeat moss

Peat Moss
This 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.

 


Peat Moss Transforms Substandard Soil
While peat moss works well for improving good, quality soil, it works absolute wonders when it comes to substandard soils.

What Peat Moss really is and how to find, purchase, prepare and use it for gardening, planting, covering and decorating.
What is Peat Moss?

Peat is the partially decomposed remains of plants, most commonly sphagnum moss. It forms over many millennia in bogs, marshes, and swamps—known as peatlands or peat bogs—often gaining less than a millimeter in depth every year.

Peat lands are made from layers of sedges, rushes, grasses, wildflowers and herbaceous wetland plants include Rocky Mountain iris, pale blue-eyed grass, shooting star and aquatic Siberian gentian.

peat moss
Partially decomposed sphagnum moss, often added to soil to increase moisture retention.
GardenWeb Glossary of Botanical Terms
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Stop Using Peat
Traditionally, sphagnum peat is the finest ingredient from which potting mixes can be made. It holds up to eight times its own weight in water, it's sterile and it makes nutrients and water available to plants.

Prepare the soil by adding 2 to 3 inches of aged compost and/or sphagnum peat moss to the area to be planted and work it into the top 6 to 8 inches. Also add bone and blood meal (1 tablespoon each for every clove planted).

Peat: Usually partially decomposed sphagnum moss and used for potting compost, etc.
Peat Substitute: Because of environmental concerns over the use of peat, a substitute is now available made from renewable materials like coir.

Peat Moss is what results when sphagnum moss dies and sinks into a bog. It breaks down slowly to form peat. Peat moss has an even greater water holding capacity than does sphagnum moss, but degrades quickly.

Peat Moss - A valuable asset renowned for its ability to retain air and water. Peat moss is partially decomposed sphagnum moss or sedge and is used in making both compost and potting soil. Also known as Feat Moss or simply Peat.

Peat Moss
A highly water-retentive, spongy organic soil amendment, peat moss is the partially decomposed remains of any of several mosses. It is somewhat acid in reaction, adding to soil acidity.

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.

Peat
The accumulation of partially decayed and carbonised vegetable matter. Deposits form in peatlands or wetlands, known variously as bogs, moors, mires and muskegs, and are used as fertiliser.
Peat wall ...

peat moss
A type of moss that is found in bogs and is harvested when it is partially decomposed. It is added to compost and soil to make it more friable or "crumbly".
perennial ...

Peat - Partially degraded vegetable matter found in marshy areas. Peat is commonly used as asoil amendment.

peat moss
The partially decomposed remains of various mosses. This is a good, water retentive addition to the soil, but tends to add the acidity of the soil pH.
perennial ...

Peat - partially decomposed vegetation (usually moss) with slow decay due to extreme moisture and cold.
Perennial - a plant, such as a tree or shrub, that completes its life cycle over several years, ...

Peat
Peat Moss
Perennial - Plant which lives many years. Examples include trees, shrubs, and some grasses.

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.

Peat- Undecomposed or only slightly decomposed organic matter accumulated under conditions of excess moisture. Plant residues show little, if any, morphological change.
Peduncle- A stalk bearing a flower, flower cluster, or a fructification.

Peat moss An organic soil additive from Sphagnum and related mosses. The partially decomposed remains of various mosses. This is a good, water retentive addition to the soil, but tends to add the acidity of the soil pH.

PEAT - The preserved and compressed remains of dead bog plants. Often known as peat moss because it is from sphagnum or sedge peat.

Peat alternative
Do 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.

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.

PEAT MOSS
A 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.

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 ...

Peat pots make planting extra easy: Just dig the hole, put in the plant, and fill in with soil. There's no need to take your plants out of the pot.

Peat moss is a very simple ancient type of plant. It has characteristics that are.
How to Build a Hydroponic System With Rubbermaid Tubs
Hydroponics is a way to grow plants without the use of potting soil, and instead.

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.

Peat moss
O, 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.

Peat moss
Peat made from sphagnum moss
Perrenial
Plants that generally will live for multiple seasons, in the plants preferred climate.

Peat
2 inches
Soak well before using as may scatter easily. Breaks down rapidly.

"Peat and cactus don't mix," he says. "I use a mixture of forest mulch for organic matter in the cactus soil."
Quirk's recipe:
three scoops of fine-sand mineral soil
one scoop of forest mulch ...

For Peat's Sake: Sarah Reichard
Compost: Homemade Humus for Healthy Soils: Grace Gershuny
Compost Tea ...

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.

1 part peat or coir (Coir is a sustainable peat substitute made from coconut husks. Peat is mined from marshland, destroying natural habitats. When you can, use coir.)
1 part perlite (popped volcanic ash that creates good drainage.) ...

If the peat is coarse or lumpy, break up clods and take out large pieces with your hands, or use a 1/4-inch screen. Mix in some dolomitic limestone, at the rate of five pounds per cubic yard of mix.

Shovel
Peat moss
Pruning shears
1
Determine your local gardening zone and select the type of oleander bush that thrives in your particular area.

* - Use peat pots or other biodegradable pots as these plants are more sensitive to damage during transplant.
Sowing Seeds ...

Sphagnum peat moss or sedge peat Composted, aged forest products
Sand Vermiculite Perlite Charcoal
Wetting agent and water-holding polymer (optional) Lime for balancing the pH, if needed.

If it is in a peat container, cut slits in the container to speed up its decomposition, and to help the roots to emerge easier.
Plant the chery tree to a depth equal to where it is in the container. Do not plant it deeper.

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.

1 bushel shredded peat moss
2 bushels perlite or vermiculite
1/2 cup 8-8-8 or similar analysis mixed fertilizer
1 level teaspoon chelated iron ...

Q: Are sphagnum peat moss and peat moss the same thing?
A: No. Some potting soils use silty peat moss and not sphagnum moss.

peat search for term - n. (ME. pete, fr. ML. peta, perh. of Celt. origin; akin to W. peth, thing - more at piece) a piece of turf cut for use as a fuel; ...

Drop seeds into pots filled with soil, peat moss and vermiculite 6 to 8 weeks before the last spring frost. When the seedlings have sprouted two sets of leaves, they'll need to be transplanted to bigger containers.
Taking the heat.

The most commonly used forms of humus are: peat moss, shaved tree bark, manure, sawdust, leaf mold, wood shavings, and sawdust. Just remember that humus from wood tends to be low in nitrogen so make sure to add any additional nitrogen accordingly.

This may seem like a peculiar concern, but if you're going to plant your flower seeds directly into the garden, or put individual seeds into peat pots, the seeds need to be large enough to handle.

Mix compost and peat moss into the soil. Add course builders sand or grit if it is necessary to improve your drainage.
When you remove the plant from the pot, use your fingers to loosen up the roots a little to get them to grow into the new soil.

If you are staring inside, plant the seeds with pointed end facing down in 6-inch peat pots. Ensure that the temperature of the soil between 85 and 90 degrees Fahrenheit. Most seeds will germinate within 5 days.

Commercial growers use peat moss. This material should be dampened and then squeezed dry to remove any chemicals. Adding a little lime to the peat moss will help neutralize it. Regular soil can be used also.

In Dec-March plant the rounded bottom of the tubers 1 inch deep in a light, well drained, potting soil that consists of peat moss, perlite, vermicultie and/or coarse sand. Water lightly until the leaves start to show then increase watering.

Organic mulches include peat moss, manure, compost, leaf mold, and sawdust. They all have the advantages of conserving moisture, slowly providing nutrients as they break down.

Sow seeds one inch (2.5 centimetres) deep in individual peat pots two to four weeks before the expected last frost in your area.

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! ...

Keep bare-root raspberry roots moist by covering them with damp peat moss or soil until planting time. Soak the roots in a bucket of water for an hour before setting plants in the garden.

To prepare the ground for planting turn over the soil to the depth of about 1' and add compost and peat moss. Basically, you'll want to prepare the planting area the same way you would a perennial bed.

Cuttings are inserted into a media of coarse, sharp sand and some peat moss, about 3 sand : 1 peat being suitable proportions. The sand should be washed clean with running water and allowed to drain. Then add the peat and mix together.

If your garden plot has packed clay or sandy soil, till in organic matter such as peat, composted leaves or lawn clippings and work them into the soil as deeply as you can. This will form a soil structure that allows roots to breathe and grow.

See also: Plant, Soil, Water, Moss, Peat moss