The most BASIC potting soil you can make. Two ingredients, very inexpensive and great for filling large containers or areas.
I want a pair of summer Gucci moccasins. I really want a pair of summer Gucci moccasins. I check on Ebay and Etsy and high end consignment shops for Gucci moccasins. Sometimes I find them. And then I don't buy them because you don't just go around buying yourself Gucci moccasins for no reason.
I have to remind myself every so often that it's O.K. to spend the odd bit of frivolous money on myself. In fact, it's kind of a good thing to do. If you can get past that seasick feeling buying yourself nice things can feel great.
So when I bought my mother an INSANELY GREAT but HUGE raised vegetable planter I nearly passed out when I realized how much it was going to cost to fill it with soil.
AND JUST LIKE THAT, THIS HAS TURNED INTO A POST
ON HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN LARGE SCALE, CHEAP POTTING SOIL!
At 15 cubic feet I was looking at close to $100 to fill my my mother's raised planter with soil. $70 if I used the cheap stuff. BOTH of the potting mixes I was looking at were 85% peat moss by the way.
This is an issue for 2 reasons .... 85 % peat moss??? Peat Moss is dirt cheap. LOLOLOL. Sorry. A little soil humour there. Peat moss is around $10 for a huge bag, so how come a bag of 85% peat moss was going for $30? Basically I was paying $100 for 3 big bags of air. Plus, if you didn't know ...
Peat moss is a non renewable resource that's been overharvested.
That means Peat moss, which naturally occurs in bogs has been harvested way, WAY more than it can reproduce. So we're down to the last dregs of Peat Moss in Canadian bogs. There's an argument to be made for Canadians continuing to use peat moss because it's their own resource that requires only a small amount of travel impact, as opposed to the Coco Coir that has to be harvested and shipped from Sri Lanka.
I'll leave it to use to decide which to use. I use both Coco Coir and Peat Moss in my potting mixes.
Coco Coir (pronounced coy-err) is coconut husk fibres usually harvested in Sri Lanka. It is a renewable resource that does the exact same thing as peat moss. It absorbs and holds water.
In my experience it doesn't hold as much water as peat though and definitely dries out faster.
Coco Coir sells for about $10 for a little block that expands to 10x its size.
It's sold in bricks like this because it's so much easier to ship from Sri Lanka. It's just packed and mashed into a compressed form and to puff it up, you just soak it in water.
I got coconut coir for my mother's planter from a local dirt place that sells everything in bulk. They had reconstituted coconut coir for $20 for half of a yard! I just had to bag it up myself. Which I did with everything I could find in my trunk.
It was just luck that I found a place that sold Coco Coir in bulk like this, it isn't easy to find this way, so don't go hunting for it. Just get the stuff that's sold in a brick. Amazon is the easiest place to find it, but in Canada they will also special order it for you at Home Hardware at a really good price.
They did not have any Gucci moccasins at the dirt place by the way. I asked. Repeatedly.
TO MAKE POTTING SOIL JUST MIX COCO COIR
(OR PEAT MOSS IF YOU MUST) WITH COMPOST.
2:1 RATIO
2 parts COCO COIR : 1 part COMPOST
Some people also add in pearlite or vermiculite to their mix, but I di. Plus I was too cheap to buy a $30 bag of Pearlite. (Pearlite is the stuff that looks like balls of styrofoam and Vermiculte is the shaley, shiny stuff). Those two things help to keep the soil from being compacted so the roots have a nice easy path trough the growing medium, but Coco Coir is so airy that I didn't think it was necessary.
The ratio of Coco Coir (or peat moss if you must) to compost doesn't really matter all that much. I have REALLY strong compost because I gather and make it from my chicken droppings and straw so I don't need a ton of compost in relation to the Coco Coir to make a good nutrient rich soil.
And as I reminded myself this spring when I was potting up my seedlings (while not wearing Gucci loafers) there is such a thing as "too much of a good thing." I added too much compost to my potting mix at a ratio of 1:1 and sent my plants into fits. They had yellow leaves with dark green veins. Basically I overdosed them.
Because I had my own compost and didn't have to buy any I had a total cost savings of around $77.
Just a few more savings like that and it'll be good-bye cardboard shoes, hello Gucci. Unless I get "the sweats" as I hover my finger over the add to cart button. In which case, I'll pop an anti-nauseant and push the button anyway.
Kelli
I'm not a loafer girl, per se, but as fun as these are http://tinyurl.com/z6w7je3 I think I'd just go for it and get these: http://tinyurl.com/zxfhp6z
:)
Karen
omg I LOVE those! I hadn't seen them. As it turns out the pair of driving moccasins I saw and loved are actually mens, lol. They're white with the gucci stripe down the front. So, I may be hitting the metallic pink loafer! ~ karen!
christine
London Brothers in Millgrove is pretty reasonable,$32 a yard for black loam.I have a pick up truck and would consider delivering for you since you entertain me so much.In case you need the big bunch!
Karen
Ha! Thanks Christine. :) I wish I had a pickup! I really, really wish I had a pickup. Thank you very much for the offer. I know who to email if I have a truck emergency. ~ karen!
AnnW
Get them. They will last you for about 10 years. You wear your garden boots most of the time, so maybe they will last even longer. They will make you wildly happy.
Karen
I like the cut of your jib AnnW. ~ karen!
AnnW
I decided that 2015 would be the Year of the Shoe for me. After thinking about it for 6 months, I bought a pair of black patent Jimmy Choo high heeled sandals. I figured every woman should have at least one pair before she turned 70 and I had only two years to go. We went to Italy to tango camp, so I visited the "mother ship" Ferragamo. I bought a pair of black loafers with the gold bit thing that they had just re-issued from a 1980 design. Heaven. I can wear them for the rest of my life. What size are you? Any chance you have narrow feet? I also hit a warehouse sale at Mark Fisher and cleaned up nicely.
Karen
LOL. Narrow feet. LOLOLOL. No. I'm afraid not. I have a 6 - 6.5 foot. And they're kind of shaped like a block. :/ LOL. I love having the odd really, REALLY nice thing. And I don't feel guilty about it one bit. I'm just cautious about it. I don't go crazy. When the fella left I swore I'd buy myself one really good thing a year. It makes me feel good. :) As your Ferragamo's have proven to you I'm sure. ~ karen!
Mary W
Lucky Mum - birthday? Happy Birthday to Betty! if not, then happy just because to Betty. I really didn't know that about the coconut stuff - thought the producers were just getting cheap. I did get some planter shells and put them in a wired column that came in sections. I left them in sections and they made the perfect holder for the floppy shells. Filled with potty soil for succulents, I planted 12 feet of a huge variety of the beautiful plants in the shells just this side of my chain length fence (deer) and set them on upturned cement building blocks - needed 5 blocks. Now it rains to water them, they dry quickly and the babies can grow freely underneath as these spread faster than rabbits. Actually we can move them to the porch when having a party to dress the pool up. That is as far as I got in Karenifying my yard. The deer ate my new expensive and wonderfully leafed out peach tree leaving one (count them - 1) peach for us. Then the horned worms ate the tomatoes to the ground overnight, the knarly black bugs swarmed my grape tomatoes and they and their THOUSANDS of babies cover the red ones (not the green ones). I never got my heirloom party colored gem corn planted so I'm sure some mold or bug will get that. I think this is the end of my gardening years. It's sad but at least I can read the latest news on your blog and be happy for you. I do miss my dill pickles and the dill on just one of the plants I put in - did grow fine but not the cucumbers. So sad. I'm going back to crafting and getting fatter as I sit some more.
Cred
That's great that you can get coco coir reconstituted in bulk. I haven't had need to fill a garden box for awhile but if I do, I'm doing some research to find if there a bulk supplier near me. I don't like the process of rehydrating it- just a little impatient. I use to buy it at home hardware without ordering it.
But the coco coir is worth the effort, everyone. As a Canadian, and spokesperson for the peat bogs (no, not really), I urge all gardeners to switch from peat to coir.
Karin
Had no clue about peat moss being non renewable! Thanks for the post. Plus the memory of the cloche hat gave me a good giggle. Best way to start the day!
Jane S
The kangaroo fur leaves me cold but I love a pair of the driving loafers.
Maureen Locke
Karen.. the link doesn't work for Betty's raised bed. I want to do some raised bed gardening when I retire... you are my go to person for all things gardening...or building.. or eating.. or crafting.... yeast infections... lol....oh hell... you're my go to person... period.
KimS
Karen, have you heard of Ebth.com? It's (Everything But The House)....online auction. I just did a search on Gucci...there's a bunch of it over there. They ship...I guess to Canada!
Thera
Actually you can make your own, with a kit, from Tandys
Ann Brookens
You didn't post a link! How are we lazy types supposed to check it out without a link? (Yes, I know this is The Art Of Doing Stuff but I live vicariously through KAREN doing stuff!)
Thera
Oh dear, what was I thinking! Lol
Here is the link:
https://www.tandyleather.com/en/
Nicole
Could you please post a link to what yhese shoes look like? Have never felt a yearning for gucci summer loafers -- but maybe I just don't know what delights I'm missing?
Ann Brookens
I agree! We need a link to the shoes you are contemplating. Then if some of your readers are overcome with lust and order some, you could perhaps work out a deal with Gucci and get yours for cheap! (Cheap-er...)
Melissa
SO happy that I managed to find your blog, I've been stalking, er, reading past blogs to catch up to your insanely rich wit and humor on life, chickens, gardening and cannot stop laughing, which I obviously SO need to do more. So, thank you for the lessons on laughter, life and all the goings-on in your world. I'm a soon-to-be farmer, so I'll be using a lot of your expertise in the near future! Downside to reading this post? Now I must go to Amazon and look up these Gucci moccasins of which you speak...must go look now...hopefully my finger that hovers over the add to cart button is on its best behaviour (spelled the Canadian way, just for you, cuz here in Texas, we don't usually talk or spell that fancy).
Karen
Ha! Yeah, we're pretty fancy we Canadians. ;) ~ karen!
Kathleen
Potting soil is really dirt cheap (you're supposed to laugh at your own joke here!) in South Africa so I'm going to file this for later.
Very informative post though. Thank you.
Becky
Hhmm. I'm thinking about tilling the coir right into my garden beds.
Karin
Haven't read the post yet. But it's Sunday night and I'm still up, cause Memorial day. And I'm thrilled as punch bout that.
And I'm one of the first TAODS to comment. Sweet :0B
Stephbo
Great. Now I have to look up Gucci moccasins to see what I'm missing. I have a pair of Coach sneakers that always make me feel like a pretentious poseur when I wear them, but they look great and fit really well.
Lynn
We are in the process of using our old compost, adding it to beds around the yard . As we have just built a double DIY spinning compost yeah no more digging just a quick turn an away we go . That means we have one more job in the yard then we can relax ...
robert
Just kill a couple of squirrels or a cat and line a pair of crocs or Birkenstocks with the fur and your done, with Alessandro's new look for gucci you'll fit right in, paper cloche included. Also, why didn't you bought the coco coir in blocks and save yourself the getting dirty for a little later?
whitequeen96
OMG, I looked at the Gucci site and you weren't kidding! They're actually trimmed in kangaroo fur, which, as everyone knows, is incredibly soft! (j/k) They're not even lined, but just have the fur around the outside. Definitely not my style, but to each his/her own!
robert
Why would i be kidding? I do believe the ones from his first collection done in just 5 days because Frida was forced to leave even when her collection was as good as finished had indeed all the insole done in kangaroo fur
Karen
Hey! Those moccasins in particular aren't the ones I'm enamoured with, lol. ~ karen!
Nancy Blue Moon
Cool....I want to see Betty's planter!
Shirley
That was my first thought, too! We just bought a raised deck planter for herbs and red and yellow cherry tomatoes, and I'm loving it. Please show us Betty's!
Karen
O.K., O.k. I'll try to get a pic of it. :) ~ karen!
Lynn
Thanks, I want to seeeeee!
Paula
I made potting soil today to use in my wicking beds. I used Peat, my compost, pine mulch (fine) and organic shrimp meal and dry chicken pellets. It is nice and fluffy and lose but it still has the ability to wick :)
Paula
'loose'
Karen
Dry chicken pellets?? ~ karen!
Ruth
Good thing you asked and forced me to look at the sentence again. I thought it said nuggets, although... 'pellets' may just be smaller 'nuggets'.
Paula
https://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/profile?PID=297