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You are here: Home / Gardening / 7 Ways to Improve Garden Soil

7 Ways to Improve Garden Soil

September 22, 2015 by Alea Milham Leave a Comment

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7 Ways to Improve Garden Soil- With a little planning and helpful neighbors you can improve your garden soil for free. Learn how with these 7 frugal tips.

When it comes to amending your garden soil for the next planting season you have many options. Most of which cost you money but with a little planning and some helpful neighbors you can improve your soil for FREE.

7 Ways to Improve Garden Soil

1. Coffee Grounds. Most people throw coffee grounds away so neighbors even the local coffee shop are often willing to give you the used coffee grounds. Tomatoes, blueberries, and other Nitrogen loving plants thrive when coffee grounds are added to the soil or compost.

2. Yard waste from yards not treated with pesticides and herbicides make great mulch of organic matter for your garden soil and compost. Think of how well the plants on  the forest floor grow. The forest is self mulching/composting.

3. Manure from farms and stables. Farmers have a lot of natural fertilizer hanging around and many are willing to give it to you if you haul it of. Get the older dried out manure that has already started to break down pretty well. It is ready to add right to the garden at the point. Only have fresh? Toss it in your compost bin. Older the manure the better. Top dress your garden with manure or make a tea by steep the manure in water for several days to reach the deeper roots faster.

4. Veggie trimmings and waste. Your neighbor next door or your local restaurant needs to get rid of this stuff and many are willing to pass it on to you for your compost.

5. Tree trimmings from your local power company. Most local poser companies are more then happy to leave a pile of mulch in your driveway rather than paying to put it at the dump. They turn the trees to mulch as they trim so their is nothing left for you to do just spread around your garden and share the love with neighbors.

6. Put old newspaper to work as an underlayer for your mulch. It snuffs out weeds and decomposes over time. For bigger areas lay sheets out in a thick layer, water, then cover with a mulch matching your landscaping. In tight spaces wod it up soak it down, and squish it in before covering.

7. Put water from your fish bowl to use. The water from your aquarium is full of nutrients for your plants and does not cost you an extra dime just drain your tank into your garden or buckets to take to your garden for instant compost tea.

With a bit of planning anyone can make their garden grow strong and healthy without spending extra money on expensive fertilizers and mulches at the local garden store.

More Frugal Gardening Tips

Frugal Depression Era Gardening Tips

How to Save Money at Greenhouses and Gardening Centers

Frugal Gardening Tips: How to Start a Garden on a Budget

5 Ways to Use Citrus Peels in Your Garden

5 Ways to Use Coffee Grounds in the Garden

5 Ways to Use Beer in Your Garden

 

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About Alea Milham

Alea Milham is the owner of Premeditated Leftovers and the author of Prep-Ahead Meals from Scatch. She shares her tips for saving money and time while reducing waste in her home. Her favorite hobby, gardening, is a frugal source of organic produce for her recipes. She believes it is possible to live fully and eat well while spending less.

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Welcome. I'm Alea!

On Premeditated Leftovers I share simple recipes made with whole foods, practical shopping tips, time saving techniques, and meal planning strategies. I also share tips for minimizing food waste, so more of the food that is purchased ends up on the table.

While volunteering as a budget counselor, I realized that food is the element of most people’s budgets where they have the greatest control. I set out to develop low-cost recipes from scratch to prove it’s possible to create delicious meals on a limited budget. Eating well while spending less is about more than just creating recipes using inexpensive ingredients; it’s about creatively combining ingredients so you don’t feel deprived and are inspired to stick to your budget.

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