There Is Such A Thing As TOO MUCH Compost. Stop Damaging Your Soil.

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • The newest trend is adding compost in endless amounts to your garden. In some cases the additions of compost can be moderate and in others the recommended volume is to garden in straight compost! This is harmful to your plants and the soil. But an over abundance of compost can also affect the environment in a negative manners.
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    👩🏻‍🦰 A B O U T M E:
    Ashley is a soil scientist who has had a passion for plants since she was a small child. In the long summers as a child, she would garden alongside her grandmother and it was then that she realized her love for greenery. With years of great studying, Ashley had begun her p
    ost-secondary education at the University of Saskatchewan.
    At first, her second love, animals, was the career path she chose but while doing her undergrad she realized that her education would take her elsewhere. And with that, four years later she graduated from the University of Saskatchewan with a bachelor’s degree in science and a major in Soil Science.
    Some of Ashley’s interests are RUclips, in which she posts informative videos about plants and gardening. The focus of Ashley’s RUclips channel is to bring science to gardening in a way that is informative but also helpful to others learning to garden. She also talks about the importance of having your own garden and the joys of gardening indoors. Ashley continues to study plants in her free time and hopes to expand her RUclips channel as well as her reach to up-and-coming gardeners.
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    This description or comments section may contain links to affiliate websites. I receive a commission for any purchases made by you on the affiliate website using such a link. This includes the gardening in Canada website. You should assume all links both on the gardening in Canada RUclips, Blog, and all other social media are affiliates and I will receive compensation.
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Комментарии • 280

  • @GardeningInCanada
    @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +43

    Kate Middleton has cancer (released today) keep her and her family in your prayers. ❤ www.ctvnews.ca/world/catherine-princess-of-wales-diagnosed-with-cancer-1.6818404

    • @agustintintin2126
      @agustintintin2126 6 месяцев назад

      Lol!........sorry to pop your illusion bubbles about British royals.....Kate has been put up as Illuminati sacrificial offers already!
      For global cabals cults..... princess as pretty high value sacrifice offering..... some huge events might be on it's way(perhaps April 8th solar eclipse has some things to do with those cabals deep dark magic requirements...)

  • @genrottluff1084
    @genrottluff1084 6 месяцев назад +33

    I purchased what was supposed to be well composted organic garden soil (I paid a lot more for it than for just plain old uncomposted compost mixed with sand and wood bits) for my garden beds and all along a rock wall 50 yards of it... I planted a tonne of perennials and started my garden... well almost every single one of my perenials died and nothing germinated and the seedlings I put in died. I suspected pesticide poisoning because plants were all shriveled and weird looking and brown. I decided to test the soil... after this... for pesticides and everything else (not cheap). It came back that my soil was way way too "hot" way too much nitrogen. I pulled half of it out and added good ole "dirt" from the lawn. NOT FUN... GRRRRR

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +7

      Yea... see that's why I get worried about people being told "plant in compost" or just "add compost" it can go the wrong direction very quickly.

    • @beautywithdani8622
      @beautywithdani8622 6 месяцев назад +2

      I think I burned my plants last season using osmocote in my outdoor containers in texas southwest facing sun. Going the organic powdered fertilizer route this season to prep planters along with a little compost (to retain moisture) and liquid fertilizing by hand as needed, and so far so good! I’m sure my plants could have also used a little more and regular watering too.

    • @leahnichol6665
      @leahnichol6665 5 месяцев назад +1

      I was composting on my balcony. I burned my plants last year with raw compost and too much fertilizer. I am testing like crazy now to not harm my plants.

    • @souljahaden6184
      @souljahaden6184 5 месяцев назад

      What was the compost brand if it was a bagged compost?

    • @brianhanrahan7561
      @brianhanrahan7561 4 месяца назад

      Where I come from
      When someone says " too hot " means it has not composted completely and needs time to " cool "
      There is a process of oxidation that transforms.crap into compost and heat is generated in that process .
      Composted manure and manure are two very different things .
      Raw manure will burn your plants

  • @johnduffy6546
    @johnduffy6546 5 месяцев назад +2

    WOW! Didn't know that was possible...How about Vermi-compost &/or actively aerated compost tea? I have some really crappy clay soil that I have been trying to improve for the last 40+ years

  • @AvroChan
    @AvroChan 6 месяцев назад +3

    My plants that grow in my compost pile always grow the best. No disease, blossom end rot ect... I also grow in strawbales without those issues mentioned... My compost is all my yard clippings in a pile and it does its own thing. I don't regulate greens and browns ect... My yard is a mix of grass, clover, creeping charlie, vetch, heal all, yarrow, nettle, strawberry ect... My gardens get some compost every year not much and get lightly mulched with yard clippings throughout the season. However my yard gets FLOODED every year in spring. Until like late June ducks can swim in my grass... and usually do...

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +2

      Haha awee the duckies have a home. It’s a multi purpose garden 🪴

  • @AdamAnthonyAdventures
    @AdamAnthonyAdventures 6 месяцев назад +28

    My horses produce about 25 yards of compost a year - have to use it. I do make sure I get herbicide free hay and feed for them.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +30

      Very Cool! Trick for a scenario like yours is to consider putting the manure on the tops of your hills where organics and nutrients are lower. Allowing gravity to do the rest of the work for you.

  • @gioknows
    @gioknows 6 месяцев назад +15

    You are very knowledgeable and you present your videos in a very enjoyable manner. Cheers from 🍁Ottawa🍁

  • @GRPermie
    @GRPermie 6 месяцев назад +32

    Breaking down taboo boundaries. Compost is the gardener's darling star item but we have to acknowledge it is not a cure-all. Thank you for the fresh content :)

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +3

      Good point!

    • @olefosshaug5565
      @olefosshaug5565 6 месяцев назад +3

      Charles Dowding add 1 inch of compost every fall and he's doing quite well

  • @j.b.6855
    @j.b.6855 6 месяцев назад +12

    Been there, done that with Grazon tainted bagged compost. Luckly for me in was confined to five 5 gallon bucket sips It made me swear never to buy bagged compost again. I only use what I make, mostly leaf mold with some regular compost. My setup now allows me to wait almost two years, so its finished.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +4

      That was last year wasn’t it? I remember us having this conversation.

  • @1963charmaine
    @1963charmaine 4 месяца назад +3

    Toronto garden with sand. I have a pallet compost bin in my back yard and fill it in the fall with leaves, and empty my outdoor container garden there. All year I add coffee grounds, finely ground egg shells, some kitchen scraps, and most of my yard waste. In the spring, like now, I sift my compost and use a ratio of 2 parts compost to 1 part potting soil for my 20 roof top 5 gallon containers for tomatoes, and cucumber. My flat roof gets the most sun. The robins love my compost bin as much as I do. By spring it's more of a worm bin.

  • @gendoll5006
    @gendoll5006 6 месяцев назад +10

    I am clearing out a large area of wild blackberry bushes to make a compost area. I see all the dead plants from winter, leaves, grass clippings, etc) as future soil now that I’ve gotten into gardening! Lol! Instead of just throwing those things in the tree line or burn pile I’m gonna put them in the same pile and turn over time and hopefully make some good “compost”.

  • @jimaboughoche6191
    @jimaboughoche6191 6 месяцев назад +10

    Calgary,AB here.Typically I add 2-3" of compost in the fall and again in the spring. This year I'm trying something different. I added 2-3" of compost in the fall like I always do,but I also added a thick layer of leaves on top of the compost and then covered with a tarp. Not planning on adding compost this spring. Hopefully will work out.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +5

      The heat the tarp traps will be helpful in decomp!

  • @reese924
    @reese924 5 месяцев назад +2

    I have two raised beds that I filled with 1/3 peat 1/3 vermiculite and 1/3 compost. Did an at home soil test after my 1st season (last year). Almost no nitrogen. Explains why my tomatoes didn't do too well maybe? I got some organic granular fertilizer that I added to the mix. Also added some bagged compost. What else should I do? I don't need more compost apparently.

  • @jgsawka
    @jgsawka 6 месяцев назад +7

    This was so interesting! Past couple of years I've pretty much only added alfalfa pellets as a fertilizer. Everything is growing gangbusters!

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +6

      That's awesome. That is what ppl generally call "green manure". Very popular in the world of Agriculture

  • @Cidtalk
    @Cidtalk 6 месяцев назад +7

    I appreciate all different ways of doing things. I have noticed that a lot of people are either ALL IN on the heavy composting, or they get snotty and say NEVER USE COMPOST...so I like your approach. To keep gardening is the important thing. I know it will take my whole life to figure out everything that works for the way I like to grow things. It's worth the years of testing, experimenting, opening my mind to new ways...all good! Thanks for the good science!

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      Just need to have fun. It’s just gardening

  • @refarmer1574
    @refarmer1574 6 месяцев назад +7

    I look forward to your video on acidifying soil! When I tested ours, along with being nutritionally depleted, I found our soil is alkaline. The test and pH meter I have don't go higher than 8, but I'm pretty sure it's higher than that. 😕

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +2

      What is your tap water? do your know?

    • @伏見猿比古-k8c
      @伏見猿比古-k8c 6 месяцев назад

      They sell bags of PH down soil amendments in the garden section at stores to lower the PH.

  • @twowheels87
    @twowheels87 3 месяца назад +2

    I’m in BC. I’m growing in 100% compost. It’s mostly made from leaves, but I added over 75 pumpkins and lots of used coffee grounds for my nitrogen. Hopefully it works out 🤞🏻

  • @vance7354
    @vance7354 25 дней назад +1

    please please please do a scientific based video on why synthetic fertilizer is just as good as organic fertilizer, from the standpoint of plant growth, not from the standpoint of soil microbes.

  • @williamwaters4506
    @williamwaters4506 6 месяцев назад +6

    I over composted two years ago and my garden vegetable plants were a disaster. This winter we had a large amount of rain and the garden was a field of mud. I hope all that rain washed away some of the ammonium. I noticed that I have a hugh number of worms.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +4

      I did it one years as well with poorly aged compost. It decimated my tomato plants.

  • @steffyincan
    @steffyincan 6 месяцев назад +8

    I am SO CAREFUL about what I put into my soil because I'm terrified about fusarium affecting my garlic. The biggest way I replenish my soil is by planting oriental mustard as a bio-fumigant. It grows, I flail chop it, and within 15 minutes of chopping I till it back into the soil.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +2

      Are you big into garlic growing?

    • @steffyincan
      @steffyincan 6 месяцев назад +10

      @@GardeningInCanada Not on a commercial scale. I just grow for myself and family. I only plant 200 to 250 cloves. I have an 800 SQ ft vegetable plot, 200 sq ft blueberry plot, and 200 sq ft garlic plot. I rotate the garlic yearly though so it spends one year in a section of the large plot, one year in another section, and the next year back into the garlic plot. Other than garlic I focus big time on tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, winter and summer squashes (not every year though), carrots, and I grow fingerling potatoes in containers. I do a lot of canning.

    • @agentbarron9768
      @agentbarron9768 Месяц назад +2

      ​@steffyincan haha for real it takes alot of garlic and onion plants to be self-sufficient, most commonly used ingredients in our household

  • @jupeisatrip8626
    @jupeisatrip8626 5 месяцев назад +5

    I don't have a truck so I have to buy bags at the big box store to top off my beds each season. I've been doing 2 bags top soil + 2 bags peat Humus + 1/2 a bag Black Kow manure compost + 1/2 a bag mushroom compost. All bags are 40 pounds. This soil is an absolute dream to plant in! I do the *hardly ever* dig method, leaving roots in ground and most litter to overwinter, zone 7. My whole property is covered with henbit and purple deadnettle in the spring so I plant right in between them. These native plants (weeds?) protect my veggies all through spring from wind, hail, flashfloods and bugs. When they naturally die back, I leave them as mulch. I am loving my garden so much more growing with it instead of trying to change it!

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  5 месяцев назад +3

      Sounds like a pretty good set up to me. You should be just fine. There’s obviously things you need to do with every garden and you’re probably gonna experience those. But nothing you’re saying hear is alarming to me whatsoever.

  • @aquilip1
    @aquilip1 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm using shredded paper and cardboard as compost around my fruit trees. It seems to be working pretty well. I have really red volcanic soil with high iron content which was hydrophobic until about five years ago when I started mulching with paper.
    It's definitely improving the soil structure but I do fertilise my trees twice a year to counteract the Nitrogen depletion. I also add wood ash and charcoal.
    Do you think that I am I doing any harm to the environment by doing this?
    From Melton in Australia

  • @charitystolworthy6429
    @charitystolworthy6429 6 месяцев назад +4

    Living in the high desert of New Mexico, zone 7b, with the lack of organic matter in our soils, the very high alkalinity of our soils, and the solarization of our soils, I have found tilling in a cover crop to begin with and mulching heavily afterwards to be almost necessary. After that initial till and a continued mulch seems to do the trick. Minimal tilling, such as forking the soil in preparation of a new year, seems to work for me. I also like to replenish the micro nutrients with kelp, and foliar feed that Michael Phillips recommends in his book, "The Holistic Orchard." This foliar feeding is used on my perennials and annuals.

  • @rcarver4049
    @rcarver4049 6 месяцев назад +3

    I garden in pure compost and have not really noticed the problems you have talked about. (Just lucky with my source, I guess). I can tell you that Brassicas LOVE pure compost. Maybe those with problems could grow different types of plants for a few seasons.

  • @terrymacleod6882
    @terrymacleod6882 6 месяцев назад +3

    i'm a lazy composter. everything in a pile surrounded by snow fence till it hits 3 or 4 feet deep, then i start turning it once a month with front end loader. three piles on the go at all times. current pile will hit the garden three years from now. everything goes in. table scraps, garden refuse, chicken manure, chickens, mice... i draw the line at pets and people though. seems to work.

  • @CreativeRedundancy
    @CreativeRedundancy 6 месяцев назад +4

    Hello Ashley listening. I guess like many things a good balance is important. I try to broadcast it out over the area and allow it to “break down “.

  • @debbielavers9836
    @debbielavers9836 6 месяцев назад +3

    Many years ago when Prince Edward Island started to create compost with household garden waste and green waste, you could get free compost. As a new gardener I took advantage and put two to three inches of this new compost on my garden. Well it took two years for my plants to recover. Some of my plants died. Lesson learned. I’m now pretty careful what I put on my plants.

    • @juliepoolie5494
      @juliepoolie5494 22 дня назад +1

      Yes, I filled my new raised bed 1/2 with the compost from the city. Herbicide damage. This is year two and I again had curly tomato leaves. Never again will I use the city free compost.

  • @soledadfischer7217
    @soledadfischer7217 6 месяцев назад +3

    I read about this a couple of months ago and I was really worried but then.... My worms work sooo slow and we're happy like that, so for me compost is not a problem ... Yet.

  • @Blossomandbranch
    @Blossomandbranch 6 месяцев назад +2

    I’ve been saying this for years! Great video ❤

  • @chrislevett6824
    @chrislevett6824 6 месяцев назад +13

    Once a year (preferably in the fall when you pull the garden for winter) 1 - 2" layer for the whole year is what I personally do and I have incredible results.

    • @mrittenb
      @mrittenb 6 месяцев назад +1

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +3

      Nice job! Is it vegetable compost or something different?

    • @bowtielife
      @bowtielife 6 месяцев назад

      My garden grows mostly year round. It gets it when it can! 😂

    • @alisonnewall1748
      @alisonnewall1748 6 месяцев назад

      Ashley, where can Canadian home gardeners get a soil test done? Or do you have a home kit you’d recommend?

  • @sharonhochberg3671
    @sharonhochberg3671 6 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for this educational video ❤. I was under the impression that soil volume decrease is due plants using up the compost. And so... each year we need to replenish the compost. Is this correct? If not, what is correct? I am interested in organic gardening - no purchased fertilizer. Thank you🙂

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +4

      so the "depletion" from one season is pretty minimal for gardeners. A good rule of thumb is to think it terms what you produced in compost. if you took all the plant biomass from your garden last year and fully composted it how much would you have to spread on the garden? The answer is likely centimetres not inches.

  • @teac117
    @teac117 6 месяцев назад +4

    You should really do that nutrient uptake video. Gardening is too many steps removed from the chemistry and once one understands (or has an inkling of) how the ion exchange works, the soil CEC and all this 'stuff' we add to the area makes more sense. Also gets rid of the chaff and gives people the ability to tailor gardening know-how to their own soil type, etc etc.

    • @teac117
      @teac117 6 месяцев назад

      But maybe not. Doing that you'd run out of content... it's futile to battle each individual myth, but it does keep the videos flow'eth :)

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      The passive and active growth?

    • @teac117
      @teac117 6 месяцев назад

      @@GardeningInCanada Start with passive to cover the secondaries, then move on to active... as people need that to understand how the different types of N ammonium/nitrate causes root interaction to alter the pH. You probably did cover how urea breaks down in a previous video already, although I can't remember.
      edit: I think you've also tangentially mentioned soil solution... but I don't know if people make that jump to that being how nutrients are uptake and transported during leaf evaporation. That sort of stuff, and how the soil composition manages what's in the soil solution is what I meant. Things like BER then become easier to explain the various ways calcium transport can be interrupted during the life cycle of a plant.

    • @teac117
      @teac117 5 месяцев назад

      I just stumbled across your 17 days videos from a while back. We're good - carry on :)

  • @trevor5290
    @trevor5290 6 месяцев назад +3

    So this explains why I love those bags of sheep compost but that said, now that we've moved and sitting on Cdn Shield and have very hard water from our well as well as pine and cedar trees making natural forest compost soil ... I def have to check the pH and follow your recommendations as we build our new beds. It's going to be a busy spring getting this up and going before May 24 weekend.

  • @NotGoddess
    @NotGoddess 5 месяцев назад +2

    I'm always altering/adjusting my landscape, so when I have extra soil I mix that into any beds that need 'topped off' along with a little compost. And I'm sure what it's like in Canada, but where I am (Midwest US) it seems hard to find real mineral soil in bags. Even bags of 'top soil' used for filling in holes seems 90% wood chips with very little actual soil. I think there's been a confusion of soil being mineral soil but compost is also often called soil, so your 'garden soil' might just be unfinished/unrested compost.

  • @stevelau7694
    @stevelau7694 5 месяцев назад +2

    I'm actually growing my main garden bed in 2ft deep of straight compost and so far I've never had blossom end rot on tomatoes or any possible PH related problems with any of my vegetables. Also live on a limestone bed so guess it shouldn't matter that much.

    • @ozarksbuckslayer2484
      @ozarksbuckslayer2484 5 месяцев назад +3

      There's no shortage of videos here on youtube of countless others who grow amazing gardens in straight compost. As a matter of a simple fact that is exactly what the most praised gardeners of the no-till cult do. Almost everybody who starts their own seeds or grows plants & flowers in pots grows all of that stuff in straight compost. She has no clue what she's even talking about. Everybody who has ever done much gardening or composting knows not to use hot compost because it will kill your plants if you do. Finished compost doesn't stink like ammonia and it doesn't heat up any more after being turned because it finished, meaning it's ready to use. If it smells like anything but dirt it's not done.

  • @Figs4Life
    @Figs4Life 6 месяцев назад +5

    I have a quick question.
    I cut down my white Oak tree in front of my house and I kept some wood chips from the bark and branches, I also kept grinded root, is the grinded root good for mulch that I want to use around my fig trees or even have it in my vegetable garden?
    Is that good to create some good micro microrizzlefungi?
    Can I use the grinded roots by itself or is it better to mix it all together, And what would happen if I just use grinded roots?

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      Nothing wrong with that. I wouldn’t incorporate it (unless fully composted) but as a mulch it would be fine.

  • @tomgatum4330
    @tomgatum4330 6 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for sharing... people prefer organic garden produce for healthy food. To produce organic vege or fruits is not as easy as we might think..lots of complicated things have to be considered...all is about balance..you explained them very well .. thanks once again Ashley

  • @uvoima
    @uvoima 6 месяцев назад +9

    I've been searching forever, but I remember being told never add more than 20% of compost to whatever amount of soil you're amending. That's why I was so surprised when you mentioned now people only using compost.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      It’s pretty common!

    • @jcl5345
      @jcl5345 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@GardeningInCanada I can't find "garden compost" in big box stores, all of them, anymore. Just two or three seasons ago, I could buy a bag of compost. Now all I see for sale is "garden soil." Don't know what that's all about. The only "compost" I find is "Black Cow manure and compost"

    • @aphillips5376
      @aphillips5376 22 дня назад

      ​@GardeningInCanada what about Mel's Mix from Square Foot Gardening (soiless mixture growing)?

  • @ApparentBulge
    @ApparentBulge 6 месяцев назад +4

    Looking forward to the acidification video.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      I am filming that this weekend.

    • @miriambartley6622
      @miriambartley6622 6 месяцев назад

      Me too. My garden is good now but I tried opening a new area to the side of it and nothing did well and most things died. I have this precious 40 ×70' plot for flowers and a larger veg garden. The soil is also loamy. My last property was clay so hard that every spring I had to beat the clods with a crow bar. We had 60 ash trees on our property plus all the neighbours- (a huge pile of leaf mold)- plus manure. We were there for 20 years.
      I think the soil would still need its spring beating.
      The comfrey and the clay wore me down

  • @laurentco
    @laurentco 4 месяца назад +1

    Was my comment deleted? Why can I not find it anymore? Did I say something wrong? It's strange because you initially liked it (heart emoji), (apparently)

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  4 месяца назад +1

      Sometimes RUclips automatically deletes comments not sure why… I think if someone reports it. And ppl I’m pretty sure accidentally do that sometimes 😅

    • @laurentco
      @laurentco 4 месяца назад +2

      @@GardeningInCanada, wow! So if somebody disagrees with something somebody wrote in the comments (not that I was arguing with anybody), they can just get RUclips to delete the comment. Well, that's how to have a grown-up discussion, now, isn't it?

  • @Gkrissy
    @Gkrissy 6 месяцев назад +2

    I love veggie compost and havnt had issue yet for over 5 years. I think being in zone7b/8a south with the humidity helps decompose my compost quicker so I don’t have any issues directly planting. I have young fruit trees and that soil are has less nitrogen and phosphorus and I was thinking of using local manures and organic fertilizers to increase those levels. I’m not a fan of synthetic fertilizers because it’s so fast and it has ruined my roses, Chinese snowball and palm tree indoor plants so I stick to organics because it’s more slow release.

  • @ausfoodgarden
    @ausfoodgarden 6 месяцев назад +1

    Aminopyralid damage isn't too much compost - just bad compost. Part-finished compost again is just bad practice, not too much.
    Yeah, growing in 100% compost is not the best idea. You need some mineral content as in clay, sand, or silt.
    Can you show me the research that compost increases alkalinity? My compost usually sits around 6.5.
    I'm not calling you out or anything, I'm just interested in finding out about that alkalinity thing especially. Cheers!

  • @olefosshaug5565
    @olefosshaug5565 6 месяцев назад +2

    I have a huge heap of aged horse manure.
    I have 20 cm no-dig raised beds with this manure on top of sandy soil.
    I add bokashi and diluted urine and everything grows just fine

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      Sandy soil is a different monster all together

  • @barrymcdonald9868
    @barrymcdonald9868 13 дней назад

    Could the prevalence of earthworms just under the bed surface indicate soil balance without many of the problems you describe in this video? I do use a lot but with good results and worm activity

  • @riverdalegardens544
    @riverdalegardens544 6 месяцев назад +2

    I add about 1 and a half to 2 inches of homeade compost every fall , sometimes "chunky"like a mulch. I do not dig it in. Many years now. All has been well so far. Your thoughts 😊 I love your channel

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      As long as you are not digging that in it should be fine. You may want to consider a nitrogen fertilizer just because you may be low in that to an extent. What soil type is under the compost?

  • @pulungnanang1632
    @pulungnanang1632 Месяц назад

    Is there any probability of not enough organic carbon in the soil?
    I'm thinking about function of organic carbon as buffer. To prevent if there's any excess of anything harmful to the plants.

  • @Utah_Mike
    @Utah_Mike 6 месяцев назад +1

    Ok, what about mulch? I am known to mulch deep, like real deep. Minimum 8 “ grass clippings, at least that much leaves, and any straw I can collect after Halloween. I do 4” layers as by doing this I have nearly eliminated weeds. Gardening about 1200 sqft or so. 😮😢😢😢😢

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      Completely different concept. I can do a video on this but Deep Mulch only affects the top 2ish inches.

  • @stijndeconinck6417
    @stijndeconinck6417 5 месяцев назад

    The garden of my new place is mostly pasture.
    I'm amending heavy clay soil with hay. I'm thinking taking it a atep further and plant directly into the decomposing hay. Ruth Stout method.
    Any putfalls here, regarding soil health?

  • @jacobclark89
    @jacobclark89 3 месяца назад

    Wow, amazing video ! Sometimes we get what we are trying to avoid on the road to avoiding it. Like if you add to much Calcium affecting the ph causing nutrient Lock up and a calcium deficiency , were is the acid rain when we need it ? How about mix some vinegar with a little limestone to make it available ✌️

  • @webenbanu
    @webenbanu 5 месяцев назад

    LOL, heretic. It's ok, most of my best friends are heretics, and I love it when people intelligently challenge my beliefs. But if I'm understanding correctly, it sounds like compost isn't a problem so long as you're careful about not composting material contaminated with pesticides and herbicides, and let it age (2-4 weeks after the compost is "finished," based on the quote you put up in your video), and then that just leaves the fertilizer burn effect. I wonder if this is still the case if you're only using organic fertilizers, which have much lower levels of the supplied nutrients than the synthetic ones and so are less likely to burn? Is the nutrient level in normal decomposed plant debris really high enough to "burn" other plants? Because that's what the fertile upper layer of soil in forests is made of, isn't it? I don't think that I'd try to grow in pure compost--there are minerals to be found in good old fashioned dirt which compost might not have--but applying compost once or twice a year to a garden wouldn't seem to be a problem so long as it's allowed to age properly, you don't spray pesticides and herbicides around your yard and then compost the clippings, and you don't allow synthetic fertilizers to build up in the compost pile.
    Btw, I love how you stressed that you were not trying to take a "dig" at the "no-dig" gardeners, lol! No digging of any sort!

  • @nadialolly-ej8rl
    @nadialolly-ej8rl 4 месяца назад

    I got bagged (random) sheep compost from my local garden center, it was no particular brand, had no instructions.
    I threw a good dose of it into a soil mixture of coconut coir, perlite, etc and once it was watered it turned into a sludgy mud and almost took my plants down by the next day. Instant root rot and mould. It was insane!
    I’m scarred after that experience I won’t be using it again, even if I add a table spoon to the soil mix I’ve noticed it causes mold, which it’s the “ good” mold, but I’m good I’m not using it anymore lol.
    I had to entire cut back my hoyas because they weren’t recovering afterwards. I just cut them back entirely and propagated the cuttings.
    Is this normal??? I’m wondering if I just put too much in or what’s the situation, I assumed you were treat it the same you would worm castings??

  • @wbshappy1
    @wbshappy1 5 месяцев назад

    I've been sifting my homemade compost, and it smells like a riverbank. I'm curious what this means? Seems like it means it's been too wet and only the fungus has been working. I've been pretty active at turning it for the past 6 months, trying to aerate it. Am I correct? Should I worry about that?

  • @matthewestes1662
    @matthewestes1662 2 месяца назад

    I’m not understanding where you are getting the idea that over composting may lower the ph…..compost can generally be applied to do the exact opposite - to raise the ph - as almost all compost is neutral or acidic…I had alkaline soil and added acidic compost to neutralize the soil - as commonly done

  • @DK6060
    @DK6060 6 месяцев назад +1

    I make a little over a yard of vegatable compost annually - kichen and garden scraps, shredded leaves, coffee grounds, crushed egg shells & old wood chips. I also buy another half-yard of manure-based compost from an organic farmer nearby. It's usually well composted but one year I had to let it settle for 6 months before I put in the garden. I'm interested in the ph video as I am on sandy, alkaline soil (7.8) and I add sulphur to the compost and the beds once a year. I'm trying to grow nutrient dense food so the reduced access to various minerals in an alkaline environment is a challenge.
    Do you have any thoughts on adding rock dust and micronutrients to compost? I see compost making as a bit of biochemistry project.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      Nah. Rock dust is just a fancy word for mineral soil.

  • @cherrybee3758
    @cherrybee3758 2 месяца назад

    Re. leaving roots and debris (and tilling-in in Spring):
    Does this increase chances for pests to over-winter?

  • @meerespflanzen
    @meerespflanzen 4 месяца назад

    As someone who took 1 ecology paper years ago, I’d rather listen to your advice over someone with zero scienctific credentials 😂😂

  • @KarlLew
    @KarlLew 5 месяцев назад +1

    Fascinating! As a vegetarian who makes compost on an annual cycle for proper aging, I have been using 100% compost to expedite a transition from hard clay to no-till. Last year I noticed that my tomato-in-compost experiment worked great except for some blossom endrot. I now understand that ammonium may have interfered with calcium uptake. 🎉Thanks!

  • @rdraffkorn3184
    @rdraffkorn3184 6 месяцев назад +1

    finally someone who can speak to limestone soils and alkaline water . I'll be waiting for a video on that topic i've struggled with for thirty years. since no one , even locals, have anything to say about it other than, ''ya, you can't garden here. sorry'' :/ already staring with fish emulsion for nitrogen.

  • @SteveRoscoe-t2t
    @SteveRoscoe-t2t Месяц назад

    Not knowing I did this, epic fail across the board. Next year will be awesome

  • @masikaLUNGO
    @masikaLUNGO 6 месяцев назад +2

    Loved this! Initially I was offended, but the information you provided brought a lot of clarity.

  • @ronaldthoms2147
    @ronaldthoms2147 6 месяцев назад +1

    I had a problem with compost an my onions last year
    We were in a drought the compost was very dry an hydrofobic onions struggled some then we got 4 inches of rain onion leaves turned white an quit growing maybe that calcium magnesium thing or fertilizers took hold all at once

  • @666bruv
    @666bruv 4 месяца назад

    Yep, a well made compost, when extracted, can be applied with as little as 5ltr, as an innoculum, for 1 tonne of seed

  • @hadleymanmusic
    @hadleymanmusic 5 месяцев назад

    should I just pour all my extra liquid fertilizer on my compost pile? its on my dirt pile ive been turnin. its kinda dry even after a storm few days ago

  • @juliansimeth424
    @juliansimeth424 4 месяца назад

    Why does it not matter if you use mineral or organic fertilizers? Would love a Video about that.

  • @dreamlovermimi9458
    @dreamlovermimi9458 6 месяцев назад +1

    I have dark gray Heavy Clay soil in my yard. I usually bury kitchen scraps and they disappear in 2 weeks lol

  • @dalehowey6095
    @dalehowey6095 6 месяцев назад +1

    What's your opinion about used mushroom compost? It should be well rotted and have the excess ammonia drained out of it during the mushroom growing stage.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      Yea that's true. It falls into the same bucket, just be conscious of quality and it should be fine.

  • @sjewitt22
    @sjewitt22 4 месяца назад

    I have crazy clay soil i was planning on making compost then digging it in, is this wrong?

  • @hedgerow.homestead
    @hedgerow.homestead 6 месяцев назад +2

    Could you do a video about fertilizing seedlings? I don't know if it's different if you use soil blocks vs seed cells... but I use soil blocks.

  • @paolae.9414
    @paolae.9414 6 месяцев назад

    Why would you choose animal manure in the garden vs vegetable?

  • @johnroehsler6440
    @johnroehsler6440 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the excellent videos. Can you let me know your thoughts on why tomatoes get hard white centers? I get them and they are
    everywhere in stores and restaurants. I have read it is stress but there is more to it than that. I grew up near tomato farms in S.C in
    the 60s and 70s and there were zero hard centers. Is it breed related ?

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      I would lean towards that being more of a variety issue rather than a conditions problem

  • @Dalmatianbee
    @Dalmatianbee 4 месяца назад +1

    I try to mulch my garden, but the winds are constantly blowing away my mulch. 😭I recently tried adding wood chips around my trees and that moves less, but leaves won't stay. I honestly think Cover crops are going to be very important in my yard.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  4 месяца назад +1

      Oh man! That’s not nice. Try your plant clippings whole

  • @mr.hamilton5393
    @mr.hamilton5393 6 месяцев назад +4

    Sharing is caring 😊

  • @cherylmosher6026
    @cherylmosher6026 6 месяцев назад +1

    What is you use “cold” manure, like rabbit? I understand not to add in lieu of the other soil needs.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      Oh goodness… what part of the video is that? I wonder if I miss spoke on something.

  • @newroots1360
    @newroots1360 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’m so frustrated, we can’t buy soil in our little own other than bagged from the hardware store. Whenever I buy “soil” it’s either old wood mulch or peat moss. I’ve tried lots of brands and I don’t think any of it is ever actually soil. Can you recommend a brand of bagged soil that is actually… soil. I need to add mineral soil to my garden and what is sold as soil is always just crappy compost. I’m also in western Canada.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      The old thing you could get is called black earth and that may or may not have organics depending on the brand

  • @janellem6436
    @janellem6436 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thoughts on adding mushroom compost (aged 2yrs) to raised beds? I planned on working some into the top of the soil before I plant this spring.

  • @Gladioli10
    @Gladioli10 6 месяцев назад +2

    This channel is my bible 🙏🏻 thanks for all the knowledge

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +2

      So nice of you. Listen to others as well though, I am not the answer just a portion of it.

  • @gonegahgah
    @gonegahgah 5 месяцев назад

    Can you grow peas, snow peas, and sugar snaps to add nitrogen to the soil?

  • @silviag1547
    @silviag1547 4 месяца назад +1

    I’m so glad I found your channel you are amazing wealth of information. Wish I found you sooner before we invested lots of $$$$$ on so many things 😢. Thank you again from Kingston Ontario

  • @verzephyra
    @verzephyra 5 месяцев назад +1

    Im curious about your thoughts on adding seaweed and kelp! I live on an island in northern BC and kelp washed up on shore is one of the most abundant resources! People use it as a mulch, and I hear about people adding it internationally, but Im curious about the way it would affect the soil health to incorporate it in and turn it into the soil.. especially given the fact that coastal rainforest soil here is often podzol and heavy clays !

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  5 месяцев назад

      Mulch or composting it are good choices. I wouldn’t incorporate it unless it was composted. But mulching it without it being decomposed at all would be just fine.

  • @SunnyNot
    @SunnyNot 6 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Ashley, is mushroom manure as good as other manures/compost? (when used in moderation) Would love to hear more about the differences and uses of veggie compost and manure/mushroom manure

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +3

      I could do a video on that!

    • @SunnyNot
      @SunnyNot 6 месяцев назад

      @@GardeningInCanadaIf you going to make that video, could you please also add fish compost to comparison? Thanks!

  • @CarlPenney-ey9ou
    @CarlPenney-ey9ou 6 месяцев назад +1

    I have been watching a RUclips channel called Jadam organic farming and garden of Korea. I think it would be a great read for you and your channel followers. Cheers

  • @jackitobin4747
    @jackitobin4747 6 месяцев назад +1

    A friend of mine had a lousy garden year 2023, nothing did well. He uses lots of compost and worm castings in short raised beds; could that be the reason for eggplants, peppers, etc. not growing much?

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      Very well could be the longer it sits the better it will get because a lot will leach out

  • @hw2664
    @hw2664 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for making this video! I stupidly believed that the more compost I added, the more nutrients I would have in my soil....then wondered why my broccoli were still purplish or pale green. Is there a link to a video of yours that talks about creating good, balanced, fertile soil? ..while on a budget 😅

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +1

      It's actually my newest video!ruclips.net/video/AoJ2zgK9HFM/видео.html&lc=Ugzxp15RBRK27BPDJtZ4AaABAg

  • @gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919
    @gigiartstudiowithartistvir3919 6 месяцев назад +1

    What are your thoughts on compost tea? I make "tea" out of compost that has urea in the pile. Although my plants are vigorous, I've wondered if ecoli could be an issue doing this practice. I'm not finding much straightforward info on this. As with everything on the internet, some people swear it's not harmful, and others swear it is. Who is right? I know it's likely not that black and white.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      It is essentially a gentle fertilizer. If you let it decomp (under oxygenated water) for a period it will have more bioavailable nutrients than regular compost for example.

  • @ninokwim7700
    @ninokwim7700 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am almost the danger zone

  • @darlenerobinson3691
    @darlenerobinson3691 5 месяцев назад +1

    Do you have any advice on digging kitchen scraps directly into the garden for composting?

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  5 месяцев назад +1

      I’m not sure I’ve done a video on if but just place it where you know there will not be a bunch of roots.

  • @brianseybert192
    @brianseybert192 6 месяцев назад +1

    Mostly due to your input, I age my finished hot compost and my leaf mold for almost a year before use in my potting mixes. This past year I have also been giving my worms more partially finished compost as bedding, the worms do a great job in finishing it off.
    Tried a aerated hydroponic solution with natural ingredients. Our water is super alkaline pH of over 8, even though I lowered the ph to around 6 the natural ingredient after a few weeks climbed back up close to a pH of 8, no wonder they were struggling.
    Looking forward to your upcoming video on lowering the pH of our soils. It seems every year one variety of tomato has a blossom end rot issue, I am sure it is pH related. Any recommendations on a soil pH meter?
    Thanks for another informative video! Stay Well!!!

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      Only the obscenely expensive ones are worth it 🥲

  • @thebandplayedon..6145
    @thebandplayedon..6145 6 месяцев назад +1

    Ashley, how do we feel about Hugalkulture? I like the idea as a raised bed option, they seem a great idea if made properly & I like they can be also used as a berm to collect or deflect rain water runoff.
    Ive been thinking of going this route for years... woulda' had nice established beds by now. lol

  • @miriambartley6622
    @miriambartley6622 6 месяцев назад +1

    I see people making compost right in their green houses and growing in this enriched soil in their greenhouses. Does this practise lead to gnats and vermin?

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      It can result in mice and gnats. Mice particularly if you use eggs

  • @sunnybizz4857
    @sunnybizz4857 5 месяцев назад +1

    I added Saskatoon city compost over my large garden. I am now battling purslane for the rest of my life.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  5 месяцев назад

      Yes…. They burned me a few times. Bell flower and persistent herbicides 😂

  • @seth7131
    @seth7131 6 месяцев назад +1

    We need to know how to acidity soil! I did so much right but couldn't get it below 8.5 and that's as high as it would go. I had great plants but not great harvest!
    Sooooooooon!!!!❤❤

  • @blackmber
    @blackmber 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’m looking forward to the soil Ph video! We have alkaline soil (and water) and I’m trying to decide whether to bother with remedies before planting vegetables this year.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +2

      if you do remedy it would be a small adjustment. You can't change pH overnight nor would you want to

  • @alexpresent8907
    @alexpresent8907 6 месяцев назад +1

    When you talk about Organics are you describing, basically, chop and drop and leaving in the plants root system when removing old plants? I’m just asking so I understand.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      No composted/decayed and cured. Chop and drop can cause nitrogen lock up if you incorporate it.

    • @alexpresent8907
      @alexpresent8907 6 месяцев назад

      @@GardeningInCanada can you elaborate as to why? Everything I’ve read it’s good for the soil especially if covered by browns. Or maybe do a video on it. Thanks

  • @gtavtheavengergunnerlegend3340
    @gtavtheavengergunnerlegend3340 6 месяцев назад +1

    took my peat mix about 3 months to get to a ph of 6.5. all my soil starts out around 7.3 so I mix and let sit in a garbage can.

  • @MonsteraGreen
    @MonsteraGreen 6 месяцев назад +1

    How much compost is too much? I feel like I missed something in the video, or I'm just being extra dense. Were you suggesting that we should use absolutely no compost, only mulch or cover crops? Or that some amount of compost is good, but not more than X inches per year?
    I usually add 1 1/2 to 2 inches of compost every year, and mulch with hay. We haven't had any special issues, just the typical pests and occasional powdery mildew. I love your channel by the way! It can be hard to find science-based gardening info on RUclips.

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад +2

      Sorry the messaging here is within reason. if you were to take all the upper biomass from last years harvest (minus leaves & lawn clipping) compost that. How much compost would you have? that is the answer to how much.

    • @MonsteraGreen
      @MonsteraGreen 6 месяцев назад

      @@GardeningInCanadaThat makes sense. Thanks!

  • @dreamlovermimi9458
    @dreamlovermimi9458 6 месяцев назад +1

    im not sure but I have been using Silica Potassium Fertilizer on all my Potted Plants and they have been Exploding with thicker, stronger, tougher growth! the SIlica video u made truly works!

  • @jayneteal-jeffery6283
    @jayneteal-jeffery6283 5 месяцев назад +1

    Love the chop and drop theory. I have done that for the last 15 years roughly. Thanks for such an informative video.

  • @YeahMcMad
    @YeahMcMad 5 месяцев назад +1

    I honestly feel like I should be paying you for this knowledge, thank you for everything!

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  5 месяцев назад +2

      Jeeze thanks thats a compliment and then some

  • @LB-vl3qn
    @LB-vl3qn 6 месяцев назад +1

    My question is not related to today's topic, but I'm having a hard time getting a real answer and I hope you can help. How long after soil has been used by cats as a litter box is it safe to use it for planting vegetables, whether or not toxoplasmosis is present? Thanks to all who answer. ~ Lisa

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      You would want to put that in the compost and let those critters do the work for you

    • @LB-vl3qn
      @LB-vl3qn 6 месяцев назад

      @@GardeningInCanada
      Thank you. Unfortunately, they've hit pretty much every bed. More than one cat at work here.

  • @carolstuff
    @carolstuff 6 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for sharing info Ashley!

  • @debgrouette6885
    @debgrouette6885 6 месяцев назад +1

    Hey, I was a newbie to growing anything and I bought and used only bagged compost for a nice rose plant. It died. I agrees with ya 100%!

    • @debgrouette6885
      @debgrouette6885 6 месяцев назад +1

      ...as in- there was no other soil for that poor sweet rose, just compost!

    • @GardeningInCanada
      @GardeningInCanada  6 месяцев назад

      that's a strong brew. Try sunshine mix #4