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anerobic soil
Just curious here. I hear people saying just use clay like soil for lilies
and not soil with contents which will break down. But I notice every year, even if I only use cat litter by the next, this soil has gone stinky and anerobic. Lately in my local group I have heard advice to just use gravel when possible, to keep if from going anerobic. What is the detriment of having anerobic soil in a pot? Thanks Bill Brister - Austin, Texas |
anerobic soil
in the wild if you try to uproot a plant you will be struck by the stinkyness of the
dirt. it is how it is. Ingrid "humBill" wrote: Just curious here. I hear people saying just use clay like soil for lilies and not soil with contents which will break down. But I notice every year, even if I only use cat litter by the next, this soil has gone stinky and anerobic. Lately in my local group I have heard advice to just use gravel when possible, to keep if from going anerobic. What is the detriment of having anerobic soil in a pot? Thanks Bill Brister - Austin, Texas ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website. I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan |
anerobic soil
Moments before spontaneously combusting humBill at
was heard opining: Just curious here. I hear people saying just use clay like soil for lilies and not soil with contents which will break down. But I notice every year, even if I only use cat litter by the next, this soil has gone stinky and anerobic. Lately in my local group I have heard advice to just use gravel when possible, to keep if from going anerobic. What is the detriment of having anerobic soil in a pot? ============================== Soils that break down release compounds into the water that feed algae I was told. Heavy clay soils don't contain all that organic matter to break down. Lilies in plain gravel did awful for me. They had small leaves and no flowers. IOW they weren't worth having. Yet some people, like Derek, have them do fine just growing in the water without even a pot. As for soil going anaerobic - how can it not since there is no water flowing through it bringing in a constant supply of oxygen. -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
anerobic soil
Just curious here. I hear people saying just use clay like soil for
lilies and not soil with contents which will break down. But I notice every year, even if I only use cat litter by the next, this soil has gone stinky and anerobic. I have less problem with stinky soil in my lilies, iris, and other less invasive plants as I use weed fabric lined open weave plastic baskets. Now with cattails, where I have to use a holeless pot, OMG! PU! The soil I use is sandy, which is less likely to compact when wet, keeps more air pockets available perhaps, and/or allows more water movement perhaps? ~ jan ----------------- (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
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