I got the AeroGarden Pro for Christmas this year and the oregano is growing real fast so I'd like to move them into pots. SO! my question is what kind of soil would I need to use that has the appropriate nutrients, I don't want my oregano to die when I switch over from h20 and nutrient tablets to soil.
And also, if anyone has experience with the aerogarden, how do I remove the plant itself. I noticed the roots have grown into the sponge, do I just plant the whole thing?
First post, thanks for any help.
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- Super Green Thumb
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Just buy some potting soil from one of your local nurseries and a bag of manure (I like mushroom but, steer, pig, sheep, chicken will all work if composted first). Add about a handful of kelp meal to the soil when mixing it with the manure.
Place the entire mixture in a pot, dig a hole that is twice as wide as the root ball of your plant, partially fill with a little manure, place the root ball in the hole and fill the soil around it.
Then water the plant and just keep the soil moist.
Don't use nutrient tablets, these are synthetic nutrients that you will be dependent on continually adding to the soil. If you put a slow release organic fertilizer like manure and kelp meal in your soil, you will not have to add nutrients to the soil until you repot your plant when the roots fill your current pot.
Furthermore, the use of synthetic fertilizers can burn your plant if you add to much and synthetic fertilizers kill beneficial soil flora and fauna that protect your plants from disease.
Basically, it's easier, cheaper and healthier to use organic soil amendments.
Place the entire mixture in a pot, dig a hole that is twice as wide as the root ball of your plant, partially fill with a little manure, place the root ball in the hole and fill the soil around it.
Then water the plant and just keep the soil moist.
Don't use nutrient tablets, these are synthetic nutrients that you will be dependent on continually adding to the soil. If you put a slow release organic fertilizer like manure and kelp meal in your soil, you will not have to add nutrients to the soil until you repot your plant when the roots fill your current pot.
Furthermore, the use of synthetic fertilizers can burn your plant if you add to much and synthetic fertilizers kill beneficial soil flora and fauna that protect your plants from disease.
Basically, it's easier, cheaper and healthier to use organic soil amendments.
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- Super Green Thumb
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LOL Opa... ever since a poster created a thread announcing that we should have warned him that fish fertilizer smells, we are all making sure we tell people that it stinks! (Actually, that thread had me in stitches... it really tickled my funny bone for some reason!)opabinia51 wrote:You are more than welcome.
You can also use liquid organic fertilizers like Liquid Seaweed and Liquid Fish fertilzers (smells), once your plants are established.
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- Super Green Thumb
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Mushroom compost can be high in salts and otherwise nutritionally spent (Shrooms work soil HARD). I do not recommend it as a soil amendment in anything more than a ten percent addition...
Plus in the aero system it was root wet all the time and indoors; you raised a sissy. Give it a bit to acclimate and get it's feet, RTS. Some real heat will perk it up; peppers love hot and dry; in short supply for much of the country right now...
Plus in the aero system it was root wet all the time and indoors; you raised a sissy. Give it a bit to acclimate and get it's feet, RTS. Some real heat will perk it up; peppers love hot and dry; in short supply for much of the country right now...
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"RTS"?The Helpful Gardener wrote:Mushroom compost can be high in salts and otherwise nutritionally spent (Shrooms work soil HARD). I do not recommend it as a soil amendment in anything more than a ten percent addition...
Plus in the aero system it was root wet all the time and indoors; you raised a sissy. Give it a bit to acclimate and get it's feet, RTS. Some real heat will perk it up; peppers love hot and dry; in short supply for much of the country right now...
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