Garden Soil Tips | HowStuffWorks

Publish date: 2023-06-15

Children who are scolded for running into the house in dirty shoes may come to believe dirt is a bad thing. But just the opposite is true as long as dirt remains outdoors where it belongs.

Choosing plants that thrive in your soil and your climate will help ensure a healthy garden.
©2007 Publications International, Ltd.
Choosing plants that thrive in
your soil
and your climate
 will help ensure a healthy
 garden. See more
pictures of garden ideas.

In the garden, dirt is transformed into soil, a complex and beautiful (at least to experienced gardeners) blend of animal, vegetable, and mineral material. Good soil is the first step to a great garden.

The loose, dark earth of fabulous gardens seen on television and in magazines doesn't usually just happen. It is created by gardeners improving their native soils. Soils can be amended with sand to make them looser and drier or with clay to make them moister and firmer. They can be given plentiful doses of organic material -- old leaves, ground-up twigs, rotted livestock manure, and old lawn clippings. Organic matter improves and nourishes any kind of soil which, in turn, encourages better plant growth.

Probably the best way to get the most out of your soil, however, is to select plants that will thrive in your soil type and your environment. The following tips will help you choose native plants.

It's hard to make the right plant choices if you're not sure what type of garden soil you're dealing with. Learn about testing your soil on the next page.

Read Your WeedsLook for the tales weeds have to tell as they grow in your garden. Weeds are opportunists, taking advantage of any vacant soil to make their home. (Just think of how well this strategy has benefited the dandelion, a native of Eurasia that has swept through America.) Although they seem to grow everywhere, dandelions prefer fertile, often heavy soil. Likewise, other weeds favor certain kinds of soil.

For instance, acidic soil can encourage the growth of crabgrass, plantains, sheep sorrel, and horsetails. Alkaline soil (also called sweet or basic soil) is favored by chamomile and goosefoot. Fertile near-neutral soils can provide a nurturing environment for redroot pigweed, chickweed, dandelions, and wild mustard.

Even if you can't tell one weed from the other, you can find out important information by looking at them closely. If a vacant garden area has few weeds taking advantage of the opening, the soil is likely to need plenty of work.

If they are growing, but only sparsely, and have short, stunted stems and discolored leaves, the area may have a nutrient deficiency, and a soil test is in order.

If, in newly tilled soil, weeds sprout up quickly in certain areas and more slowly in others, the weedy areas are likely to be moister and better for seed germination.


Want more gardening tips? Try:

Contents
  • Test Your Soil
  • Amend Your Soil
  • Add Nutrients to Your Soil
  • Maintain Your Garden
  • Test Your Soil

    Before you start adding fertilizers and amendments to your garden soil, you need to determine what type of soil you have. This follows the old advice, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." Sometimes unnecessary tampering with nutrients or soil acidity can actually create more problems than benefits.

    Soil tests tell you the nutrient levels in your soil, a plant version of the nutrient guides on packaged foods. They also note pH and organic content, two factors important to overall smooth sailing from the ground up. The following tips will help you test your soil.

    Now that you've determined your soil type, find out more about making changes to create the best soil possible for your environment on the next page.

    Want more gardening tips? Try:

    Amend Your Soil

    Some soils are sandy; others have a high percentage of clay. Some soil drains well, while other types stay soggy for too long. The good news is most soil can be improved upon to help you create a luscious garden. The tips that follow will help you make the right changes to your soil.

    No matter what type of soil you have, you can continue to improve it by regularly adding organic matter. Find out more in the next section.

    Sources of Specific NutrientsMany of these fertilizers are available processed and packaged. You don't have to harvest your own in order to add them to your soil.
    • Nitrogen: livestock manure (composted), bat guano, chicken manure, fish emulsion, blood meal, kelp meal, cottonseed meal
    • Phosphorus: bonemeal, rock phosphate, super phosphate
    • Potassium: granite meal, sulfate of potash, greensand, wood ashes, seabird guano, shrimp shell meal
    • Calcium: bonemeal, limestone, eggshells, wood ashes, oyster shells, chelated calcium
    • Boron: manure, borax, chelated boron
    • Copper: chelated copper
    • Magnesium: Epsom salts, dolomitic limestone, chelated magnesium
    • Sulfur: sulfur, solubor, iron sulfate, zinc sulfate
    • Zinc: zinc sulfate, chelated zinc Iron: chelated iron, iron sulfate

    Want more gardening tips? Try:

    Add Nutrients to Your Soil

    Basically all types of soil will benefit from the addition of organic matter. Check out the following tips to learn about adding nutrients to improve your soil and ultimately encouraging better plant growth.


    Where your garden is located and how often you till your soil can also affect its quality. Learn how garden maintenance can improve your soil on the next page.

    Sources of Organic MatterValuable organic matter comes in all shapes and sizes. Here are some of the most common:
    • Compost
    • Livestock manure
    • Straw Grass clippings
    • Salt hay
    • Shredded bark
    • Bark chunks
    • Shredded leaves
    • Seedless weeds
    • Peat moss
    • Kitchen vegetable scraps
    • Mushroom compost
    • Agricultural remains such as peanut hulls or ground corn cobs

    Want more gardening tips? Try:

    Maintain Your Garden

    The location of your garden, how you till your soil, and many other factors can have a dramatic impact on your soil. These tips should help you tend to your soil the right way.

    Don't take your soil for granted! Take heed of the tips outlined in this article to get the most of your soil and create the garden you've always dreamed of.

    Want more gardening tips? Try:

    ncG1vNJzZmign6Kyb7TOsKqtrZabxLC%2ByqxlnKedZLSivsOepaKml2S0or7DnqVmnJWotqi6jqCYq5yVo3q0u8ilZK2hoKh7qcDMZWNlZFxheW0%3D