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Old 22-04-2009, 12:16 AM
iantib iantib is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Apr 2009
Posts: 2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by David Hare-Scott[_2_] View Post
iantib wrote:
Hi there,
Last year on a budget we made some raised beds & I was suckered by a
skip company into buying top soil from them. It arrived & was full of
broken glass & crushed bricks & stones. Do you guys know of any way
of improving it?


Try and rake out the larger stones and all glass, leaving glass there is
just an accident waiting to happen in the future. Gardening is a hands on
thing. Smaller pebbles are not desirable but not as harmful and you may
have to tolerate them, many people do.

So far I have mixed in some chicken pellet manure, all the compost
from my 3 compost bins.


Good

Will it make any difference if I mis in some fish blood or bone meal,
or is it the case that its just dead, rubbish soil & my own fault for
doing it on the cheap?


It will help

The snag is were on a tight budget so any ideas you have will be
greatly appreciated.

Thanks

p.s. A friend at work's dad has 1000 chickens & has offered me a large
supply of chicken poo if I need it.



Chicken poo is good manure, it is full of minerals, especially nitrogen
compounds when fresh. Don't over do it or it will kill your plants, the
fresher it is the less you use. It's not much good for texture though. You
may get good results adding it to your compost heap with a low nitrogen
source of organic matter such as straw.

What would be good is a large amount of a lower nutrient manure (horse, cow,
etc) or some other vegetable matter that will improve the organic content.
You don't just need nutrients (chicken poo) but structure as well. Try hay,
grass, straw, finer mulch, animal bedding, any local source of dead plant
material that is cheap. Sometimes people will pay you to take it away.
Before taking anything like that check it for contamination and weeds, you
don't want to be importing more problems. If it is still green or contains
weed seeds compost it first.

p.p.s. I should also say were new to gardening so be kind with your
responses :-) Especially with me buying top soil from a skip company


Many of us have learned from such mistakes.

David
Thanks to you all for your advice. I'll give them a go. Thanks