Could your garden pass a soil test?

Could your garden pass a soil test?
How well do you know your soil? It's an important question for the
health of the plants in and around your house. Good soil does more
than provide a foundation for roots to grab on to. Well-structured
soil lets the roots breathe easily, provides the right amount of
nutrients and water to the plant, and has the right pH balance for
the kind of plants you're trying to grow.
Poor soil can inhibit plant growth in a number of ways. If it has
too high a clay content, it will compact easily, drain poorly,
prevent air from getting to the roots, and dry into hard clumps. If
it's too sandy, it will drain too quickly, erode easily and have
difficulty holding nutrients for the plants to use. Good soil
strikes a balance between these two extremes. When you pick up a
handful, it feels moist and loose without falling through your
fingers, has a fresh, clean smell, and a rich dark colour.
To find out what your soil structure is like, stir a handful into
a clear glass of water and let it sit for several hours, until the
water clears. The coarse, heavier sand particles will eventually
settle to the bottom, with silt layering the top. The finer clay
particles will eventually settle on top, and some humus (organic
matter) will likely float on top of the clear water. Looking at the
side of the glass, you can tell what your soil is primarily made
of.
If it's mostly sand, digging in lots of high-organic topsoil and
peat moss will improve it a great deal.If it's mostly silt and
clay, it will benefit from the addition of washed sand to help it
drain and aerate well.
All soils will benefit from liberal applications of compost. Work
the soil by turning it over and mixing it well to a depth of at
least one foot, before planting.
SOIL pH LEVELS
Acidity or alkalinity in the soil is measured by pH values, on a
scale of 1 (most acid) to 14 (most alkaline) with a level of 7
considered "neutral" Each level is ten times more or less than the
next, ie. 5 is a ten times more acidic than 6 and 100 x more
acidic than 7. A pH level of 8 is ten times more alkaline than 7,
and so on.
The pH level influences the availability of nutrients for you
plants, and the type of plants you can grow. For example, azaleas
and rhododendrons like a lot of iron, a micronutrient that becomes
less available to plants as soil alkalinity increases. These plants
prefer a more acid soil, where iron is freely available... other
wise, their leaves become yellow between the veins. Unavailability
of many other nutrients can have widely ranging, but equally
damaging effects.
Most plants will grow well in a pH range of 6.5 to 7.2, where
nutrients are readily available to them and this is a good area to
strive for. But to start, it helps to know what your present soil
pH value is.
You can buy a simple, inexpensive soil test kit from your garden
center, or ask them for local resources for testing soil samples.
Alkaline soils can be neutralized by adding peat moss, or small
amounts of Vigoro Aluminum Sulphate. Acid soils can be neutralized
by adding Canagro Dolomitic Limestone. Be sure to read the label
and change the soil pH slowly and carefully, to ensure you don't
upset the balance too far in the opposite direction. Compost will
also help neutralize soil pH and add nutrients at the same time.
SOIL NUTRIENTS
All plants need a good balance of the major nutrients, Nitrogen,
Phosphorus and Potash, as well as minor or "micro" nutrients such
as magnesium, copper, iron, calcium, manganese and many others in
minute quantities. You can test your soil for the presence of these
nutrients, and add those that are needed in the form of fertilizer.
They will quickly become available to the plants (providing your
soil pH is fairly neutral) and promote healthy growth. Regardless
of pH level, the absence of any key nutrient can cause growth
problems. Using a good quality general purpose fertilizer like PINK
Vigoro will help to ensure plants get the balanced nutrition they
need.
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