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Old 21-04-2004, 06:03 PM
Dwight Sipler
 
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Default Vermiculite alternative for square foot gardening?

escapee wrote:

Vermiculite is inert, has no nutritive value to speak of and is used merely by
the greenhouse industry as a potting medium and seed germination product. It is
used because it is very lightweight and deliveries are easier and trucks can
haul more...




Vermiculite is a mica-like mineral. When heated, the laminae break apart
and the mineral expands, which makes it light and also makes it able to
hold water. The primary value in growing media is its water holding
capacity, coupled with improved drainage. That sounds contradictory, but
it's not. The water is held in the vermiculite particles, but the
particles are large, creating spaces in the medium between the particles
through which excess water can travel for drainage. Since roots need
both water and air, vermiculite is a valuable addition for starting
plants. I believe the basic composition is related to silica, so it has
no significant nutritive qualities.

As a mineral, it is extracted from mines.
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Old 27-02-2020, 03:44 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Vermiculite alternative for square foot gardening?

replying to Laura J, M Casey wrote:
In addition to potential downside of using vermiculite, there is the fact that
peat moss harvesting is environmentally unsustainable. Even though peatlands
occupy only 3% of the Earth's surface, they store a third of the world’s
soil carbon, twice as much as forests, and when they are harvested, carbon
dioxide is released, the major greenhouse gas driving climate change. Many
people recommend coconut coir as an environmentally friendly alternative to
peat moss.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/garden...ing-15015-.htm


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Old 16-06-2020, 12:42 AM posted to rec.gardens
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Default Vermiculite alternative for square foot gardening?

On Wednesday, February 26, 2020 at 9:44:03 PM UTC-5, M Casey wrote:
replying to Laura J, M Casey wrote:
In addition to potential downside of using vermiculite, there is the fact that
peat moss harvesting is environmentally unsustainable. Even though peatlands
occupy only 3% of the Earth's surface, they store a third of the world’s
soil carbon, twice as much as forests, and when they are harvested, carbon
dioxide is released, the major greenhouse gas driving climate change. Many
people recommend coconut coir as an environmentally friendly alternative to
peat moss.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/garden...ing-15015-.htm


Is coconut coir as absorbent as peat moss? Also, why are you out here posting on a discussion from 15 years ago? I thought I was the only weird one out here reading this stuff.
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