Procurement of plant land leaf land. Leaf ground (leaf humus)

  • Leafy soil, or leafy humus, is formed from leaves that are piled up to rot.

    Leaves of deciduous trees are collected in parks, gardens, squares after leaf fall. Oak and chestnut leaves are less suitable because they contain a large amount of tannic acid, which negatively affects the root system of garden plants and decomposes slowly. Heaps are piled 1-1.5 m high, in dry summers they are abundantly watered. During the year, heaps are shoveled 2 times. After 2 years in heaps, the leaves completely decompose, turning into a homogeneous earthy mass, suitable for use in gardening and indoor and greenhouse floriculture.

    Leafy soil is considered nutritious and light. In complex earthen mixtures used in indoor and greenhouse floriculture, it ranges from 1/5 to 3/4 of the part.

Related concepts

Heather land. It is used for potted and tub culture of rhododendrons, azaleas, camellias, some types of orchids, ferns and other ornamental plants.

Chlorophytum (lat. Chlorophytum) is a genus of herbaceous plants. Previously, Chlorophytum was attributed to the Liliaceae family; among modern studies there is no consensus on the place of this genus: according to the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, the genus belongs to the Asparagus family, according to the GRIN website - to the Agave family.

Tree peonies - a group of species, natural and artificial hybrids and varieties of the genus Peony (Paeonia) characterized by thick, slightly branched, erect perennial shoots.

Indoor plants are plants that are grown in rooms and public spaces. Most indoor plants come from the tropics and subtropics.

References in literature

NIDULARIUM STRIPED (Nidularium innocentii var. Striantum Wittm.). Bromeliad family. Homeland - tropical regions of America. Herbaceous perennial stemless plant. The leaves are sessile, belt-shaped with longitudinal white-yellow stripes. Arranged spirally, forming a funnel in the center of the spiral, from which the lower leaves absorb water with nutritious mineral elements. During the flowering period, the middle bracts turn bright red, which gives the plant a special decorative effect. The flowers are collected in dense spike-shaped inflorescences emerging from a leaf rosette. Nidularium blooms in late winter - early spring. Propagated by young rosettes and less often by seeds (in greenhouses). The best soil mix for nidularium: finely chopped sphagnum moss, leafy soil, peat and sand (2:2:1:1). In summer, abundant watering, protection from the bright rays of the sun, periodic top dressing with mineral fertilizer of low concentration, warm and humid air are required. At room conditions, the nidularium must be sprayed frequently. From October to April, nidularium is kept on a bright window at a temperature of 15-16 ° C. In winter, watering should be more rare and careful. Single copies or groups are used to decorate rooms, foyers, shop windows, winter gardens, etc.

In Europe, Aphelandra has become a common plant due to its bright leaves and showy buds, although it is quite difficult to grow it indoors. It grows well only in warm (22-23 ° C) rooms with humid air, and it does not tolerate dry air at all. Overdrying of the coma, temperature fluctuations should not be allowed. Aphelandra is propagated from December to April by the tops of shoots at a temperature of 23-25°C. Rooted cuttings are planted in pots in a loose earthen mixture of 4 parts of leafy soil, 1 part of peat, 1 part of humus, 1 part of soddy soil, 1 part of sand, charcoal and bone meal, phosphorus must be added. Seed propagation is possible.

Leafy soil consists of rotted leaves of woody plants. Leaves are usually harvested in autumn, less often in spring in forests, parks and forest parks. The most suitable for these purposes are the leaves of maple, linden, elm, fruit and small-leaved (birch, aspen) plants. Fallen leaves, twigs, dried grass are raked with a rake and stacked in piles up to 2 m wide and up to 1.5 m high of any length. Then the piles are watered with slurry, lime is added and compacted. During the next summer, the leaf mass is shoveled two or three times and moistened with slurry. By the end of the second year, rotted leaves turn into light, loose leafy soil, the nutrients of which are in a form accessible to the roots and quickly absorbed by plants.

In the brightest place of the summer cottage, cacti, stonecrops, crassula and other succulents are placed, watering them moderately, but not feeding them. Actively growing callas require abundant watering, so there should be some water in the pan at all times. Large specimens of callas are transplanted into a mixture composed of leafy earth, sand, humus and peat. All components are taken in equal parts. The newly appeared shoot is separated and placed in a small pot with the same substrate.

Features: a variety of asparagus pinnate. In contrast, it has a low height and therefore does not require support. It has short shoots richly covered with cladodes. In pots for low asparagus, an earthen mixture is used, consisting of soddy, leafy earth, peat and sand in a ratio of 1:1:1:0.5. Suitable for single and group planting.

Zinnia is a light-loving and heat-loving plant that does not tolerate frost. For abundant long flowering requires soil with sufficient nutrients with a neutral reaction. The area allocated for the cultivation of zinnias is first dug up, and then humus, compost or leaf soil is added at 8-10 kg per 1 m2. From mineral fertilizers add 1 tbsp. spoon of superphosphate, potassium sulfate and nitrophoska and again dig to a depth of 10 cm.

Related concepts (continued)

Pellionia (lat. Pellionia) is a genus of flowering plants in the Urticaceae family. The genus includes more than 20 species of evergreen perennial herbaceous plants and shrubs, widely distributed in tropical and subtropical regions of Southeast Asia.

Currant (lat. Ríbes) is a genus of plants from the Gooseberry family (Grossulariaceae) of the order of dicotyledonous flowering plants Saxifrage.

Hamedorea (lat. Chamaedorea) is a genus of flowering plants of the Palm family (Arecaceae). Includes more than a hundred species of low-growing woody plants, widely distributed in South and Central America.

Nitrária (lat. Nitrária) is a genus of halophyte plants, low shrubs of the Nitrariaceae family, in some sources it belongs to the Zygophyllaceae family.

Wittrock violet, or garden pansies (lat. Víola × wittrockiána) is a herbaceous perennial plant of hybrid origin of the Violet family.

Marx is multi-leaved, zhminda vine, zhminda rod-shaped, strawberry spinach (lat. Blítum virgátum, Chenopódium foliósum) is a herbaceous plant, a species of the genus Zhminda (Blitum), isolated from the genus Mary (Chenopodium) of the family Amaranthaceae (Amaranthaceae). Sometimes cultivated.

Codiaum motley (lat. Codiaēum variegātum) is a perennial evergreen shrub; species of the genus Codium of the Euphorbiaceae family (Euphorbiaceae).

Cauliflower (Brassica oleracea L. var. botrytis L.) is a common vegetable crop, one of the cultivars of the garden cabbage species. It belongs to the varietal group botrytis, like Romanesco.

Asian hybrids (English The Asiatic Hybrids) - I section of lily varieties of complex hybrid origin according to the classification of the third edition of the International Lily Register (The International Lily Register. Third Edition. The Royal Horticultural Society. London, 1982).

Valerian, valerian (lat. Valeriána) is a genus of perennial herbaceous plants of the Valerianoideae subfamily of the Caprifoliaceae family, including more than two hundred species. The Latin generic name comes from lat. valere - to be healthy. It was first used in a book by the Italian botanist Matteo Silvatico (1285-1342).

Tomato, or tomato (lat. Solánum lycopérsicum) is an annual or perennial herbaceous plant, a species of the Solanum genus of the Solanaceae family. Cultivated as a vegetable crop.

Livistona (lat. Livistona) is a genus of perennial plants from the Palm family (Arecaceae), growing in Southeast Asia, Africa, Oceania, Australia.

Large-leaved hydrangea, or large-leaved Hydrangia (lat. Hydrángea macrophýlla) is a plant species of the Hydrangea genus, Hydrangeaceae family.

Actinidia kolomikta (lat. Actinídia kolomikta), or creeper - a perennial shrub liana; species of the genus Actinidia. Cultivated as an ornamental and fruit plant.

Tigridia (lat. Tigridia) is a genus of perennial herbaceous bulbous plants from the Iris family, or Iris (Iridaceae).

The narrow-leaved sucker (lat. Elaeágnus angustifólia), or the eastern sucker, or pshat (fesida) (Elaeagnus orientalis) is a species of woody plants of the genus Loch (Elaeagnus) of the Loch family (Elaeagnaceae). South European-Central Asian species.

Pieris (lat. Pieris) is a genus of low evergreen shrubs or stunted trees (sometimes lianas) of the Heather family, common in Asia and North America.

Brussels sprouts (lat. Brassica oleracea var. gemmifera) is a vegetable crop. Traditionally considered as a variety of the species Cabbage (Brassica oleracea) of the genus Cabbage (Brassica) of the Cabbage family (Brassicaceae); some modern sources do not consider Brussels sprouts as an independent taxon, but consider it a group of varieties of the species Brassica oleracea L., with this approach, the correct name for this group is Brassica oleracea Gemmifera Group.

Planting in crop production is the planting of young plants (seedlings, seedlings) of parts of plants (cuttings) or organs of vegetative reproduction of plants (tubers, bulbs) in a permanent place (in a field, garden, flower garden, and so on).

The most delicate Passiflora, or Banana granadilla, or the softest Passionflower, or Kuruba, or Tahoe (lat. Passiflóra mollíssima) is a tree-like liana of the Passionflower family, producing edible fruits. Species of the genus Passionflower.

Common hazel, or Hazel, or Hazelnut (lat. Córylus avellána) is a species of deciduous woody shrubs and trees of the genus Hazel (Corylus) of the Birch family (Betulaceae).

The real slipper, or the real lady's slipper, or the common lady's slipper (lat. Cypripedium calceolus) is a perennial herbaceous plant, widespread in Eurasia from the British Isles to the Pacific Ocean, a species of the genus Slipper of the Orchid family (Orchidaceae).

Jerusalem artichoke, or Jerusalem artichoke, or tuberous sunflower (lat. Heliánthus tuberósus) is a species of perennial herbaceous tuberous plants of the Sunflower genus of the Asteraceae family.

Azalea (lat. Azalea) - the collective name of some flowering plant species from the genus Rhododendron (Rhododendron). Previously, these species were separated into an independent genus of the Heather family (Ericaceae) - Azalea L..

Oxalis four-leaf (lat. Óxalis tetraphýlla) is a perennial bulbous herbaceous plant, a species of the genus Oxalis of the Oxalis family (Oxalidaceae).

Pisonia umbrella (lat. Pisonia umbellifera) is a decorative and cultural species of a plant of the genus Pisonia of the Nyctaginaceae family. It has another name - Pisonia Brown.

Common horse chestnut (lat. Aésculus hippocástanum) is a large deciduous tree, the most famous species of the Horse chestnut genus in Russia.

Korean chrysanthemum (lat. Chrysanthémum × koreanum, English hardy chrysanthemums) is a group of perennial small-flowered varieties of garden chrysanthemum (lat. Chrysanthemum × hortorum) of hybrid origin, characterized by relatively high resistance to low temperatures. Widely used in outdoor cultivation.

Paulownia felt, or Imperial tree (lat. Paulównia tomentósa) is a plant species of the genus Paulownia (Paulownia) of the Paulownia family (Paulowniaceae).

Martagon hybrids (English The Martagon Hybrids) - one of the sections of lily varieties according to the classification of the third edition of the International Lily Register (The International Lily Register. Third Edition. The Royal Horticultural Society. London, 1982).

For each greenhouse crop or group of crops, mixtures are made from pre-harvested meadow and forest lands.

The mixture should contain a sufficient amount of nutrients in an easily digestible form, pass air and water well, and also have a certain reaction - neutral (pH 7), acidic (pH below 7) or alkaline (pH above 7). Most plants grow well in neutral soils.

The main components of the mixtures: turf, humus, leaf and peat soils, as well as coarse sand (in different proportions).

1) Turf land contains a lot of plant residues; it is rich in essential nutrients gradually used by plants. It is better to harvest it in June - July on upland meadows or old pastures with cereals and legumes.

To increase nutritional value and speed up, the turf is overheated and layered with cow manure (1 cubic meter of manure per 4 cubic meters of turf), and lime is added to neutralize acidity (1-2 kg per 1 cubic meter). A recess is made on the stack to retain rain and irrigation water.

During the summer and autumn, the stack is mixed 1-2 times, pouring slurry or water over it. In the spring of next year, it can be used, but the best soddy land is obtained after two seasons. A longer preparation period leads to the loss of the main qualities - the porosity and elasticity of the soddy land.

Before use, the earth is passed through a screen with cells 3-4 cm in diameter to separate large clods and impurities. Small semi-rotted parts of the roots are the main value of sod land, they cannot be removed.

There are heavy soddy soil harvested on clay soils, and light - from light sandy soils. A cubic meter of heavy earth weighs 1.5 tons, light - 1.2 tons.

2) humus land obtained from well-decomposed manure, it is a black homogeneous mass, rich in essential nutrients with a predominance of nitrogen. Such land is often called a greenhouse, as it is formed in greenhouses from rotted manure. For the preparation of humus land, you can also take fresh manure. It is stacked in a shaded place for 1-3 years. During the summer, the stack is moistened and mixed 1-2 times. Before use, the earth is sifted through a screen.

Mucky soil is used when the mixture needs to be more nutritious (for most potted crops and seedlings of annuals and plants that cannot tolerate fresh manure). A cubic meter of humus earth weighs 0.6-0.8 tons.

Instead of humus soil, you can use compost, which is obtained as a result of the decomposition of plant and other residues within 2-3 years.

3) Leaf land, loose and light. To obtain it in autumn or spring, fallen or semi-decomposed leaves accumulated in the forest (forest litter) are collected in heaps. Oak and willow leaves, as they contain a lot of tannic acids, are undesirable. Leaves decompose faster if they are loose (should be shoveled); they are systematically moistened, preferably with slurry, along with which many microorganisms are introduced. When shoveling, it is useful to add lime (0.5 kg per 1 cubic meter). After 2-3 years, the leaves turn into a homogeneous, very light mass (weight 1 cubic meter 0.5-0.8 tons), which is sifted through a screen before use. Leafy soil is used to make light mixtures. In its pure form, it is used for sowing small seeds and picking seedlings (begonias, gloxinia, etc.).

Leafy soil mixed with peat and sand (2:4:1) is often replaced with heather, which can only be harvested in places where heather grows.

4) Peat land light, loose, well absorbs and retains moisture, significantly improves the physical properties of earth mixtures. It is obtained as a result of the decomposition of the peat of raised bogs, folded for 2-3 years in a pile, or the weathering of peat crumbs, collected in heaps and lain in the air for at least a year.

Peat is laid in a pile or a pile 40-60 cm high, pouring 3-4 kg of lime and 10-15 kg of phosphorite flour per 1 cubic meter. m. During the summer, peat is mixed 2-3 times and watered with water or slurry. Weight 1 cu. m of peat land 0.8 t.

5) Sod-peat the earth is made from turf taken from peat meadows. In its pure form, it is used in the cultivation of hydrangeas, azaleas, camellias, etc., in mixtures - for many greenhouse plants, sowing seeds, for laying the lower layer of the substrate or cuttings, as well as mulching the soil and making peat-humus pots. Weight 1 cu. m of peat land 0.6-0.8 t.

6) Vegetable, or garden, land is an arable layer, taken in the fall in areas freed from under vegetable crops, and lain in piles for one season. This land is well fertilized and used for growing seedlings. Weight 1 cu. m of vegetable land 1.2-1.3 tons.

Sand coarse-grained(river or lake) is used to give the mixture porosity (10-20%) and when rooting cuttings, and also fill them with small seeds.

Mountain sand is of little use, since it contains ferruginous compounds that are harmful to plants, so it must be washed in water before use. Weight 1 cu. m of sand 1.5 tons.

Moss, as well as sand, gives the earth friability and contributes to a more uniform moistening of the earthen coma. Use dried and crushed peat moss - sphagnum.

Chopped moss is necessary for the germination of large seeds of tropical plants (bananas, palm trees), for the cultivation of orchids, for wrapping trunks of plants that form aerial roots, for forcing lilies of the valley, etc.

Coal wood absorbs excess moisture in the ground, and when it dries it returns. It is added in the form of pieces in a small amount to earthen mixtures for plants that do not tolerate waterlogging.

The main land reserves are stored in piles under awnings or covered with insulating material (straw, dry tree leaves). In the open air, lands lose their valuable qualities.

Land in the amount of the annual need is stored in special rooms. The land used for growing flower crops for several years, depleted, when stacked is mixed with humus or compost and left in the air for 1-2 years, occasionally mixing and watering with slurry.

Mixes are made as needed. Sift each of the components separately, pour by volume (including sand), then mix well. Mixtures are heavy, consisting of clay-turf and humus soil with the addition of sand (3: 1: 1), in which plants with fleshy and thick roots are planted (krinum, clivia, old specimens of palm trees, etc.); medium - from soddy, humus, peat or leafy soil with the addition of sand (2: 2: 1: 1) for fast-growing plants with strongly developed roots (levkoy, fuchsia, pelargonium, etc.); lungs, composed of peat, or leaf, or heather, humus soil and sand (3: 1: 1) with the addition of charcoal, which are used for sowing seeds and plants with very poorly developed and thin roots.

nutrient pots(earthen cups and peat cubes) are used for growing seedlings.

The material is an earthen mixture, compiled taking into account the needs of plants.

To increase the nutritional value of cubes and pots per 1 cu. m earth mixture add 1.5 kg of ammonium nitrate, 3 kg of superphosphate, 0.5 kg of potassium salt.

Both beginners and experienced gardeners, gardeners and lovers of indoor flowers are sure to come across such a concept as turf land. Many people are literally lost in conjecture, representing a sod, often abundantly covered with grass, which can be used almost in this form. However, in reality, this is not entirely true. Soddy land is often included in the composition of already prepared substrates, which are sold in both garden and flower shops and are intended for planting a wide variety of plants. But, as you know, the substrate can be both bought and prepared by yourself, and it is still unknown what will be better. So sod land can be purchased by paying decently, or you can cook it yourself, spending some time and effort.

Sod land is a specially prepared substrate based on turf covered with grass. © DFB

Benefits of turf land as part of a garden mix

How are garden mixes different?

To begin with, let's talk about the obvious differences between garden mixtures, because their composition is sometimes very different. Considering the main ingredient in a garden mixture, you can understand whether the mixture is acidic or not. For example, if peat is present in the garden mix and there are no deoxidizers such as dolomite flour, then the soil is likely to be acidic.

And if sod land is present as a base, then this may indicate that the soil has a neutral reaction of the environment (but this is not 100%, so it is still advisable to check the acidity of the soil by analysis).

What is good sod land?

It is especially loved by flower growers because it contains an abundance of nutrients, is rich in minerals, is considered light soil and moisture permeable, although the values ​​of the latter properties are rather average.

Quite often, it is soddy land that is the basis of many soil mixtures, and such mixtures are readily acquired by people who do not accept acid and the "uselessness" of peat.

The amount of sod land in the composition of the soil mixture

Usually, the amount of sod land in the composition of the soil mixture can vary greatly and range from a third to a half of the entire mixture. However, do not forget that in the turf mixture, despite its nutritional value, there may be quite a bit of nitrogen, as a result, additional additions of this element will be required.

If we talk about the acidity of sod land on average, then sod land is usually (but not always) close to compost soil in this indicator, because sods often form from the same “substances” as compost, only over a longer period of time.

How to prepare soddy soil yourself?

Places for harvesting turf land

Cutting the soil into pieces and collecting them is easiest in any deciduous forest area. There, the turf forms the fastest. But not “under every tree” you can collect sod land, it is better to use the soil of linden alleys, maple soil and various fruit plants for this.

As for such crops as, for example, willow or oak, it is better not to take turf there. The thing is that the turf, for the most part, formed from the leaf mass of these plants, and therefore the turf soil, which you will later receive from the turf, is literally saturated with tannins, which always act in the same way - they inhibit the growth and development of any plants. trapped in such soil.

Sometimes you don't need to go far to collect sod for sod land - the nearest forest area or even parkland, here are a couple of suitable places to collect such land. Why? Yes, because, in fact, sod land is a layer of sod with a thickness of a couple of centimeters to five, depending on how long trees grow in this place, whether it is an artificial planting or a forest.

This layer is literally permeated with small twigs, dried leaf blades, blades of grass and the remains of their parts. At its core, it is the basis for the preparation of soddy soil, suitable for growing a wide variety of crops and ideal for growing flower crops.


The place of harvesting sod land on the edge of the forest. © The Woodchuck Canuck

Types of soddy soil

There can be several types of turf soil, depending on the place where the turf was taken to obtain it. Basically, it is the mechanical composition of the soil of this area that plays a role here. For example, you can prepare light-turf soil, it will consist of clay and dust particles in a volume amount of about 30%, the rest, as we said above, is almost ready-made humus from twigs and other things.

The second option is heavy soddy soil, in which the amount of clay and dust particles can reach 60 percent or even more.

Sod land preparation time

Of course, this is not winter, not early spring and not late autumn, the best option is May, that is, late spring or the end of summer, that is, the month of August. They prepare soddy soil from sod, that is, they literally cut the soil into squares up to five centimeters thick (in rare cases they take more), up to 15 centimeters wide and up to twenty centimeters long.

After the cut pieces of turf are taken to their final destination, they are stacked in piles, preferably in a place where the sun looks, but not more than a couple of hours a day. Further, these sods, in order for them to turn into a full-fledged sod land, must undergo a kind of “ripening”, and this requires specific conditions.

For example, let's take the turf brought from the forest. It can be stacked in a stack of absolutely any length and width, but it is better not to make this stack more than one and a half meters high. Stacking sod in piles is best done closer to autumn or at its very beginning, therefore, spring harvesting is less appropriate, it is better to focus on autumn.

What to do after preparation?

After harvesting and laying the turf in piles, it is necessary to moisten it with slurry, usually a bucket of slurry is needed per square meter of turf half a meter high. It must saturate the sod, which is necessary to start and activate the fermentation processes and speed up the preparation of sod land.

The second option for preparing sod land

Its essence lies in the peculiar laying of turf. They also need to be stacked in rows in stacks, but in such a way that the parts overgrown with grass, those that look up, are directed inward, that is, the grass in the stacks is turned towards the grass.

And between these layers of grass, in order to accelerate all the processes of decomposition of the sod and increase its nutritional value, including the enrichment of the nitrogen component, it is necessary to lay cow or horse manure in a layer of 11-12 cm every 30-40 cm (in height) and so on until meters or one and a half - maximum. If it was possible to prepare the sod, but it is acidic, then when laying manure, you can mix with lime, it needs only 40 g per square meter of sod.


Ripening soddy land in a stack. © Agrostory

What are the stack sizes?

The most different, most importantly, no more than one and a half meters in height, because it is corny inconvenient to work higher. As for the width, it is optimal up to 110 centimeters, and the length is up to two meters. In large piles, in addition to the inconvenience of their maintenance, air exchange is usually much worse, and the decomposition of the turf itself is greatly slowed down.

What to do with a pile in winter?

It is best not to touch at all, leave it as it is, do not cover, just wait for the onset of heat, and as soon as the air warms up to 5-8 degrees above zero, moisten with a solution of mullein (3 kg per bucket of water, this is per square meter of stack).

During the summer, warm period, among other things, the stack must be mixed several times (two or three times). It is best and most convenient to use ordinary garden pitchforks for this. Mixing the stack will accelerate the process of turning the sod into a full-fledged sod land and will allow the “recharge” to be more evenly distributed throughout the mass of the future sod land.

If during the summer period there is weather devoid of natural moisture, that is, there is no rain for a long time, then it is imperative to moisten the stack with ordinary water from a hose, trying to water it so as to completely wet it.

In some cases, two seasons are enough - that is, the first season is laying the stack in spring or autumn, the second season is its tedding, and by the end of the warm second season, the soddy land is ready. But sometimes, if the turf is clearly not decomposed, then it is necessary to repeat all the procedures for another season, and at the end of its turf land can be safely used.

If you need a little sod land

It is worth noting that if you need soddy land in a modest size, for example, to update the top layer in a flower pot a couple of centimeters thick, then you can not cook it in such a long way.

To obtain a small amount of sod land, it is permissible to cut off a layer of sod, spread a plastic film and, holding the sod by the grass, shake the soil from a piece of sod onto the film.

Quite a lot of soil is obtained in this way when cutting sod in meadows, however, if you notice that sedge or horsetail grows in this place, then be sure that the earth is acidic here, but if legumes grow, then it will be quite suitable for use .


To get a small amount of sod land, you can cut off a layer of sod and simply shake the soil out of it into a container. © Superdom

How to use sod land?

What to do with sod land before use?

Soddy land must be passed through a fine-meshed mesh before use, having built something like a roar familiar to all gardeners and gardeners. In this case, all large fractions, as well as those parts that have not decomposed, will roll down the screen, and the smallest parts will pass through it, forming a uniform loose mixture.

After that, the soddy soil can be folded into wooden boxes or plastic bags (as from sugar) and be sure to remove it in a room inaccessible to sunlight. It is best to keep the bags lying on their side so that the mixture does not compress.

On the site, that is, literally "under the open sky", turf land ready for use should not be left. Under the influence of rain, sun and wind, as well as changes in day and night temperatures, soddy land will lose some of its nutritional properties, become less porous, less elastic and naturally less suitable for further use as a component in the preparation of nutrient soil.

Preparation of the resulting sod land immediately before use

Usually sod land in its pure form is not used. True, if you have the opportunity to do a chemical analysis of the soil in the laboratory, and the data show the presence of the main components in the soil you brought in sufficient quantities, then in principle, such soil can be used without additional enrichment.

As a rule, all sorts of “impurities” are added to the sod land - often these are complex fertilizers, say, nitroammophoska, 10-15 g is enough for a bucket of sod land. You can make wood ash, it contains up to 5% potassium, it needs 500 grams per bucket of soddy land.

The introduction should be accompanied by thorough mixing until a homogeneous composition. Sometimes, to increase the amount of soddy land and some loosening it, river sand is added in the amount of one part of sand to three parts of soddy land.

Further, we strongly recommend disinfecting soddy land, because it can, in fact, contain anything, and the fact that it has lain in the form of layers in the cold for one or two winters does not fully guarantee the destruction of the ovipositor of pests or disease spores.

By the way, the procedure for disinfecting soddy land must be carried out initially, before mixing it with fertilizers or river sand. The best option is to spill it with boiling water. To do this, you need the largest colander, into which you should pour soddy soil and pour boiling water from the kettle. Of course, in this way you can destroy the beneficial microflora, but in this case the risk is justified and necessary.


Soddy soil must be passed through a fine mesh before use. © Superdom

The use of sod land

Sod land is usually used for growing a wide variety of houseplants and seedlings, for forcing green crops or growing vegetable crops in winter for the sake of obtaining an “out of season” crop.

The main thing is to use the soddy soil correctly, loosen the top layer more often, water it, fertilize if it is necessary for this or that plant, and when laying in a container, be sure to initially lay a drainage layer there, the role of which can be played by expanded clay, broken brick, pebbles or other small pebbles.

Properly selected soil mixture for indoor plants is the key to a good development of the root system and the whole plant as a whole. Under ideal conditions, a certain land mixture is selected for each individual plant. In general, most houseplants thrive in slightly acidic potting mixes with a pH of 5.5 - 6.5. The soil mixture must be nutritious and necessarily moisture and breathable.

Land for planting home plants is a mixture consisting of various garden soils, taken in a certain proportion. When compiling land mixtures, the following components are usually used:

Sod land is a heavy nutrient soil with an acidity of pH 7-7.5. It is prepared from turf cut in fields and meadows. The chopped turf is laid in layers, if possible, layering with manure and watering each layer. The earth is formed within two years.

Leafy ground - loose ground with an acidity of pH 5-6. Less nutritious compared to turf. It is formed during the decomposition of plant leaves. It is harvested in autumn from fallen leaves. The leaves are periodically shoveled and watered. Leaf land is formed in the same way within two years. The most fertile and useful is the leafy land prepared from the leaves of alder and poplar. It is not advisable to use oak and chestnut leaves.

Coniferous soil is loose, acidic soil with a pH of 4-5 and a rather low nutrient content. It is harvested from the bottom layer of the litter of coniferous forests, preferably pine forests.

Humus

Humus is a dense homogeneous earth with an acidity of pH 8. It is very rich in organic matter and is of great nutritional value. Humus is prepared from the manure of domestic animals and straw, which serves as bedding for them.

Peat and peat dust

Brown high-moor or dark transitional peat with a pH of 3.5 - 5.5 is most often used to prepare the soil mixture. Peat provides looseness and moisture capacity of the soil mixture, while increasing the initial acidity of the substrate. The use of lowland peat with a pH of 6 is undesirable for indoor plants. It has a rather thin structure, which is quickly destroyed and compacted.

Sand

Thoroughly washed river sand is used as one of the important components of the land mixture. It increases the permeability of the substrate, making it lighter and more permeable to water and air. Sometimes sand is used as drainage.

Sphagnum

Sphagnum moss growing in upland and transitional bogs is characterized by high moisture capacity, has antiseptic properties and a pH of about 4.

It is the most important component in the preparation of an earthen mixture for growing epiphytic plants.

For indoor gardening, soil mixtures are usually used, made up of components in the following volume parts:

Mixture Humus Peat Sand Additives
№1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0
№2 2 1 0 1 1 1 0
№3 0 2-3 1 0 1 0,5 0
№4 0 1 1 0 1 0,5 0
№5 0 3 0 0 1,5 1 0
№6 0 0 2 0 1 0 0
№7 1 1 1 0 1 1 0
№8 0 1 1 0 1 0 2

Heather soil, loam, compost, fern roots, and tree bark are sometimes added to potting mixes for houseplants.

heather land

Heather soil is extracted from a shady forest in which heather grows in abundance. Leaves and stems in such a forest rot, forming a powerful nutrient layer. Such land is well permeable to water and air and has a fairly high heat capacity. However, it has a significant drawback - heather land loses its physical properties very quickly, so it is usually used for sowing seeds and seedlings.

Loam

Some houseplants require a strong mineral soil. it is prepared from clay, which is previously subjected to frequent freezing. Peat and organic (or mineral) fertilizers are added to the clay.

Compost

Compost is an organic fertilizer obtained as a result of the decomposition of organic substances under the action of various microorganisms. There is a composter in almost every suburban area. The fertilizer obtained in it has an incredible nutritional value.

fern roots

The roots of ferns are sheared from the rhizomes of bracken, kochedyzhnik and osmund. In crushed form, they are added to land mixtures for epiphytic and semi-epiphytic plants.

Bark

For soil mixtures, as a rule, the bark of coniferous trees (pine, larch or spruce) is used. It is crushed into various fractions and added to land mixtures prepared for growing epiphytic plants. The bark is an excellent baking powder.

To increase the porosity of the soil mixture, coarse perlite, vermiculite, polystyrene or polystyrene are added to it.

Heavy, medium and light soil mixes

Ground mixtures are divided into heavy, medium and light.

Heavy earth mixtures consist mainly of soddy soil. They are used for growing palms, large woody and some herbaceous plants.

Medium soil mixes consist of equal parts of soddy and leafy soil and a certain amount of humus, peat and sand. Such land mixtures are suitable for growing the bulk of indoor plants.

Part light earth mixtures turf land, as a rule, is not included. They grow begonias, peperomia, gesneriaceae, arrowroot, acanthus, gesneriaceae, as well as some seedlings and young plants from cuttings.

If you decide to start creating a soil mixture for your indoor plants yourself, you need to do this in advance, at least a month before planting. If any of the necessary components of the land mixture is missing, it can be replaced with a suitable one.

Universal and specialized soil mixtures

Currently, specialized stores offer a fairly wide range of ready-made soil mixtures for domestic plants. They are divided into universal and specialized.

Universal mixtures are used for most houseplants. However, when using them, it is very often necessary to add additional components - drainage, peat or sand, as well as the necessary microelements necessary for each specific type of plant.

Specialized mixtures are used for each specific group of indoor plants. They can be used without any additional additives.

When purchasing a ready-made land mixture, carefully read its composition and purpose on the label.

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