Promoting compost uses and benefits - because healthy soil means a healthy landscape. Naturally!
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Friday, July 24, 2015
Got Compost: DON'T TEAR YOUR LAWN OUT! There are easier ways to...
Got Compost: DON'T TEAR YOUR LAWN OUT! There are easier ways to...: Higher temps and lack of water can cause folks to resort to drastic measures, such as tearing out lawns and gardens. But there’s no need to...
DON'T TEAR YOUR LAWN OUT! There are easier ways to survive this drought.
Higher temps and lack of water can cause folks to resort to drastic measures, such as tearing out lawns and gardens. But there’s no need to go to that extreme. Check out these tips for saving water and your lawn:
Improve the soil
- Use compost as a mulch in shrub/flower beds to add organic matter to the soil, project the soil, insulate it from high temperatures and retain moisture.
- Aerate and top-dress the lawn with compost to increase the ability of soil to absorb and retain moisture.
- Replace water-intensive plants with drought-tolerant ones and add compost to the soil when planting to improve moisture retention.
- Use compost as a mulch in shrub/flower beds to add organic matter to the soil, project the soil, insulate it from high temperatures and retain moisture.
Make your irrigation system more efficient.
- Check your sprinkler timer cycles. Does water run off after 20 minutes? If so, shorten the duration of the cycle and increase the number of cycles.
- If water runs off, shorten the duration of the cycle.
- Install a smart controller with a moisture sensor. The system will water only when the lawn really needs it.
- Adjust the sprinkler heads so they spray only on the lawn, not pavement or flower beds.
- Replace spray heads with rotors which are more efficient.
- Install separate lines for shrubs/flower beds with fewer cycles and longer duration.
- Install drip lines or soaker hoses for shrubs/flower beds.
Friday, November 21, 2014
Got Compost: Drought Conditions Call for Healthy Soil!
Got Compost: Drought Conditions Call for Healthy Soil!: With persisting drought conditions and water shortages here in California, drought-tolerant landscaping is definitely the way to go. ...
Drought Conditions Call for Healthy Soil!
landscaping is definitely the way to go. While planting drought-resistant plants and water conservation are important factors, truly drought-tolerant landscapes begin with the soil.
For plants, grass and trees to be able to thrive in drought
conditions, they require nutrient-rich soil that is properly aerated and able
to disperse water efficiently. To prepare soil for a water-wise landscape, you
should first till and loosen soil roughly a foot deep. Highly compacted soil
makes it difficult for roots to spread. It also makes it harder for water to
penetrate the soil adequately before it evaporates. Important to keep in mind
is the fact that healthy soil is as important to landscapes comprised of rocks
and cacti as it is to those with lawns, shrubs and flower beds.
Once the ground has been loosened the addition of compost,
rich in organic matter, will provide the nutrients your plants need to grow
healthy and lush even in tough conditions. Soil straight from your backyard
just won’t do the job, neither will just any compost off the shelf of your
local garden supply center. All compost is not created equal. As a result of
the variety of organic materials that go into the compost feedstock, there can
be a wide variability in the characteristics and quality of compost products.
As a result, you may ask, “How do I buy compost that meets my landscaping
needs?”One answer is to purchase only compost that complies with the terms and conditions of the USCC’s Seal of Testing Assurance [STA] Program. This will provide you with the information that you need in order to make an informed buying decision
Ideally, you should prepare your soil and complete your
planting before the hottest and driest parts of the year. If your plants have
time to develop a healthy and deep root base before the hottest and driest
parts of the summer, they will be stronger and better able to withstand drought
conditions.
After you have prepared your soil and completed your
planting, you should then cover the ground with a thick carpet of mulch. Not
only will mulch reduce the number of weeds that will use up water and
nutrients, it will prevent the water from evaporating at ground level before it
has time to penetrate the soil.
Because almost all drought tolerant plants have a vast,
far-reaching taproot that seeks water out deep below the soil’s surface,
well-amended soil is a must when planting a drought-tolerant garden. Compost
must be added to native soil if drought-tolerant plants are to survive. Even if
you are planting a sloped area, adding 1 or 2 inches of compost to native soil
is imperative; water must soak deep into the soil where, in times of drought,
plants’ taproot systems can have access. Adding Harvest Blend Compost to your
native soil will greatly improve the texture, aeration and draining capacity,
so this should be your first priority when planting a water-wise garden. Naturally!
Friday, August 22, 2014
Got Compost: OM = Organic Material, Important in Building Healt...
Got Compost: OM = Organic Material, Important in Building Healt...: If your soil and turf are healthy, you might think that the soil would be able to generate its own organic content. This is not necessaril...
OM = Organic Material, Important in Building Healthy Soil

Truly healthy soil has between 3% and 5% organic material.
That level can be maintained ONLY IF organic matter is added to the soil at the
surface year in and year out. Plants, earthworms, and microbes need that extra matter
to support healthy soil. In the woods and grasslands, that added organic matter
came from dead leaves or dead grasses decomposing each year. We need to repeat that
process in our lawns to be able to maintain a healthy organic content in our
soil.
Very few residential landscapes have soil this rich with
organic material. The truth is soil beneath our lawns typically contains less
than 1% organic material. This is because over a ten or twenty year period not
only was no new organic material introduced, but the main source of these
materials such as leaves and grass clippings have been collected and transported
to local landfills. What a waste!
Healthy soil needs a steady supply of new organic material.
It’s constantly decomposing, adding nutrients for the grass and plants, and
must be replaced. Decomposed grass clippings and other organic material don’t
have much food value left, but they’re valuable in aerating the soil, storing
water and in feeding key microorganisms needed for other tasks. Leaving grass
clippings on the lawn might provide some organic material; it is not enough to
consistently provide 3 or 5 %. This is why we need to add more.
How can we add extra organic matter, you ask?
The solution is simple, and one you may not be familiar
with; top dressing. Top dressing a lawn is the process of adding a fine layer
of quality compost to your lawn. The quick & easy method involves simply
working the compost into the grass with the back of a landscaper’s rake or a
stiff broom (making sure not to smother grass with compost) and watering
thoroughly. In only a few days, you’ll notice your lawn taking on a strong,
healthy appearance; greening up where before there were patches of brown grass.
The “Professional” method is the same process with one
exception; aerate soil before adding compost. If you have an irrigation system
you’ll need to make it’s marked with flags before aeration (don’t want to poke
holes in pipes now, do we?) Then proceed as you would for the quick & easy
method, making sure to water well when finished. When you top dress your lawn
with compost, this organic material eventually begins to decompose. More
important, the earthworms seek it out and pull it down into the soil and eat
it.
If you don’t regularly top dress your lawn, it’s high time
to begin. It might sound like extra work, but it’ll pay off big time in
contributing to the development of healthy soil; stimulating soil life to
provide nutrients and opening soil structure so it holds air and moisture.
Harvest Blend Compost contains premium organic matter
necessary to raise soils’ organic levels to the recommended 5%. Locally
produced from quality, recycled organic materials, Harvest Blend Compost has
passed the strictest testing methods to carry the Seal of Testing Assurance
(STA) label. This means our products are free of weed seeds and pathogens,
guaranteeing product safety for your lawn and garden.
Healthy soil translates into healthier grass. Growing in soil
with 5% organic content, lawns can expand their considerable root systems, reaching
deep into the soil to tap more dependable supplies of water and nutrients. They
are more self-reliant, less dependent on us for nutrition and moisture. They do
not suffer stress. The result is fewer problems with weeds, diseases and pests.
Naturally!
For all the details on Top dressing and Harvest Blend Compost
and all its benefits, go to www.GotCompost.com
or call us at 805-925-2771
.
Friday, May 30, 2014
Got Compost: Keep Water Clean! Replace Lawn Pesticides with Com...
Got Compost: Keep Water Clean! Replace Lawn Pesticides with Com...: Did you know that… Santa Maria’s storm drains do not go to the City's wastewater treatment plant? When surface water flows through...
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