Thread: Soil
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Old 13-12-2007, 04:01 PM posted to rec.gardens,rec.gardens.edible
Omelet Omelet is offline
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Default Soil

In article
,
Billy wrote:

In article
,
Bill wrote:

In article ,
Charles wrote:

On Wed, 12 Dec 2007 20:02:36 +0000, CORVIDSTATION61
wrote:


Hi everyone!
Could anyone tell me if certain plants thrive in poor soil, does that
mean they wont grow very well in good soil? Thanks Mark


A counter example, Protea. Soil with adequate phosphorous for most
plants is toxic to them. Pacific Horticulture magazine had an article
about them, one place they grew very well would not support weeds.

I think there are other plants from Australia with a similar
phosphorous sensitivity.


Take a peak at the reviews here.

http://www.amazon.com/Weeds-What-The...250043/ref=pd_
bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1197500351&sr=1-1

or

http://preview.tinyurl.com/ysejb4


Bill


Bill, I hope the holidays are being good to you. Mine started off fine
but then the relatives showed up:-(

Books like "Weeds and What They Tell" really appeal to me but some times
I wonder. One of the reviews read, in part, "Guilds, the author tells
us, are groups of plants that function as an ecosystem to provide
products for humans, create cover and food for wildlife, nourish the
soil, conserve water, and repel pests. A simple example of a guild is
the "three sisters" (corn, beans, and squash); corn stalks provide a
trellis for beans, the beans supply nitrogen to the soil, and the squash
leaves inhibit weeds and conserve water." The group kicked around the
idea this year of growing beans on corn stalks and iirc the up-shot of
it all was that there may be specific beans that do well on corn but in
general, it is a bad idea. I grew my corn in blocks and the light seemed
to have had a hard time penetrating in to the beans. The beans that grew
on the periphery did OK but they had a bad habit of pulling the corn
stalks over. The melons that I planted also had the sunlight problem and
were stunted until the "hounds from hell" found them. That was the end
of that particular problem.

The group discussions we have had have been more valuable to me than any
of the books that I have purchased.

Oh, in response to the OP. Grapes make better wine if they are nitrogen
and water stressed. If water and nitrogen are available, ad libitum,
they will vegetate and not set fruit.


Add more Bone Meal to the soil?
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Peace, Om

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