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someone 08-04-2010 10:16 PM

Adding pond slime to plants
 

"john hamilton" wrote in message
...
We have a lot of plants in pots. When scraping the bottom of the pond we
bring up a greenish muddy slime. Someone said they thought this would be
nutritious to mix with the soil in the plant pots. Would this be true?
Would it be likely to be on the acidic side or not?


Recently Aldi has been selling a brilliant pH meter for a quid or so. Just
stick it in your soil and find out. I put it in a pot of what I thought was
an ericaceous soil and lo and behold, the pH was 6.5. Perfeck. So at least
the gadget works.

I expect it would also work if you put it in water.

The annoying thing about most stuff to do with pH is that you have to
purchase some small quite expensive package where you only get enough
chemicals for one or two goes.

someone



Bill who putters 08-04-2010 10:37 PM

Adding pond slime to plants
 
In article ,
"someone" wrote:

"john hamilton" wrote in message
...
We have a lot of plants in pots. When scraping the bottom of the pond we
bring up a greenish muddy slime. Someone said they thought this would be
nutritious to mix with the soil in the plant pots. Would this be true?
Would it be likely to be on the acidic side or not?


Recently Aldi has been selling a brilliant pH meter for a quid or so. Just
stick it in your soil and find out. I put it in a pot of what I thought was
an ericaceous soil and lo and behold, the pH was 6.5. Perfeck. So at least
the gadget works.

I expect it would also work if you put it in water.

The annoying thing about most stuff to do with pH is that you have to
purchase some small quite expensive package where you only get enough
chemicals for one or two goes.

someone


There may be a cheap way. I'd guess you must take your soil or pond
scum and dry it which is a variable. Take a known weight and add water
a known water vol. and then use pH papers.

Lets see if you can avoid a pH meter.

http://tinyurl.com/y8k4a2a

--
Bill Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA


Tim Watts 08-04-2010 11:10 PM

Adding pond slime to plants
 
someone
wibbled on Thursday 08 April 2010 22:16


"john hamilton" wrote in message
...
We have a lot of plants in pots. When scraping the bottom of the pond we
bring up a greenish muddy slime. Someone said they thought this would be
nutritious to mix with the soil in the plant pots. Would this be true?
Would it be likely to be on the acidic side or not?


Recently Aldi has been selling a brilliant pH meter for a quid or so.
Just
stick it in your soil and find out. I put it in a pot of what I thought
was
an ericaceous soil and lo and behold, the pH was 6.5. Perfeck. So at
least the gadget works.

I expect it would also work if you put it in water.

The annoying thing about most stuff to do with pH is that you have to
purchase some small quite expensive package where you only get enough
chemicals for one or two goes.


http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/60-Litmus-Univ...st-papers-New-
Fresh_W0QQitemZ200348777971QQcmdZViewItemQQptZUK_B OI_Medical_Lab_Equipment_Lab_Supplies_ET?hash=item 2ea5b7bdf3#ht_2667wt_941

All of 1.64 inc postage :) Should last forever if kept dry.

someone


--
Tim Watts

Managers, politicians and environmentalists: Nature's carbon buffer.


Mark[_7_] 08-04-2010 11:23 PM

Adding pond slime to plants
 
Bill who putters wrote:


Lets see if you can avoid a pH meter.

http://tinyurl.com/y8k4a2a

LOL
http://lmgtfy.com
bookmarked

\0




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