Hi kirstenm
There have already been some great replies from the Ninja community as always.
Here are my additional discount compost tips to help you improve poor garden soil.
Buy soil improver in bulk:
Buying bulk tonne bags or loose tonnes dropped onto drives can help save you considerable money. Tree surgeons may have chipped tree bark that you can collect at a low rate. However chipped bark is slow to break down and not the best soil improver.
Budget-friendly Mushroom compost:
Maybe look at Mushroom compost which is a lot cheaper and a good bulk buy soil improver. Not as rich as compost.
Free Well rotted manure:
You could also ask local horse owners or stables if they have any well-rotted manure. Usually 6-8months old, cold and non-smelly. A lot of stables will allow you to collect this for free and it's fab for soil improvement! The below image shows manure that's not rotted down enough. When it's ready it will be dark black, slightly crumbly and shuld smell earthy not like manure!
Make your own free leaf mould soil improver:
https://youtu.be/Q-w0lD711LQ
Choose high quality peat free compost that lasts:
If you are choosing compost always pick peat free. Peat is incredibly damaging to the wider environment and is not sustainable. Dalefoot compost is one of the best and most expensive but it lasts. So sometimes it's worth spending a bit more.
You can also use old spent compost from pots - see my video below for other recycling uses of compost to improve soil!
https://youtu.be/T1vVfz0r0U0
Good luck with your garden endeavours!
Lee
Hi kirstenm
There have already been some great replies from the Ninja community as always.
Here are my additional discount compost tips to help you improve poor garden soil.
Buy soil improver in bulk:
Buying bulk tonne bags or loose tonnes dropped onto drives can help save you considerable money. Tree surgeons may have chipped tree bark that you can collect at a low rate. However chipped bark is slow to break down and not the best soil improver.
Budget-friendly Mushroom compost:
Maybe look at Mushroom compost which is a lot cheaper and a good bulk buy soil improver. Not as rich as compost.
Free Well rotted manure:
You could also ask local horse owners or stables if they have any well-rotted manure. Usually 6-8months old, cold and non-smelly. A lot of stables will allow you to collect this for free and it's fab for soil improvement! The below image shows manure that's not rotted down enough. When it's ready it will be dark black, slightly crumbly and shuld smell earthy not like manure!
Make your own free leaf mould soil improver:
Choose high quality peat free compost that lasts:
If you are choosing compost always pick peat free. Peat is incredibly damaging to the wider environment and is not sustainable. Dalefoot compost is one of the best and most expensive but it lasts. So sometimes it's worth spending a bit more.
You can also use old spent compost from pots - see my video below for other recycling uses of compost to improve soil!
Good luck with your garden endeavours!
Lee
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