Dirt
I didnt lose them. The problem was that when I watered them after adding
the compost, the water took an awful long time to soak in, and then it keep
the roots wet for several weeks with out watering.
I was answering Polar's response to my earlier post. Thanks. Dwayne
"James Mayer" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 9 Mar 2003 07:33:18 -0700, "Dwayne" wrote:
It was some that the City had composted. They pick up grass clippings
during the summer on one day and garbage another. Then they compost all
the
plant remains they pick up. You drive up with your pick up and they dump
as
much in with a front end loader. There is no cost for it, so I figured
it
was pretty good until I mixed it too heavy. The water finally soaked in,
but now it stays wet for a long time and I think I have lose some of my
plants from having wet feet.
Any ideas? Dwayne
If anyone had been using "weed and feed" on their lawn, you
probably lost them to the broad leaf weed killer.
"Polar" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 7 Mar 2003 21:37:36 -0700, "Dwayne" wrote:
Might want to add sand to it. Compost I have used straight has kept
water
from soaking in. It just stood on top until it finally soaked in. It
also
keeps roots wet on plants more than when mixed with sand. Maybe your
soil
will eliminate the problem, but it didn't for me. Dwayne
Surprised to read this, as compost is generally so "loose" that it
needs soil added to give plants a foothold. So water would soak in
even faster than in all-dirt.
Was it your home-made compost, or store compost, or?
"Marley1372" wrote in message
...
If it has 50% compost, why would you need to condition it further?
Toad
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Polar
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