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Wood Ashes

The Other Soil Sweetener

Wood ashes are a soil sweetener commonly used as an amendment to bring acid soil more towards neutral.

In a similar fashion to Dolomite lime it’s used for changing the pH of lawns especially under coniferous trees.

Ashes are about two thirds as effective in raising a low or acid ph.

Avoid using wood ashes at all if you are in a high pH area with alkaline soil above 7.

Confused about what pH is and how to test it?

Go to this site and see how to do a Home Soil Test.

Wood Ashes
A Picture of Wood Ashes

Wood ashes will also contain calcium, potassium, phosphorus, magnesium and sulfur in variable amounts, depending on the type of wood burned.

If a tree while it’s alive has roots reaching to the depth of a water table at one or two meters below the ground, its wood will have all the nutrients carried up from that depth in its tissues, including the fall leaves.

Once the wood burns, it will still retain some of the nutrients in the ash.

Adding wood ashes to the compost in small amounts or sprinkling it onto your garden beds as a snow melting method can add the small amount of these nutrients to the garden.

Wood Ashes with Bio char
A Picture of Wood Ashes with Biochar

Ashes from your fireplace often have unburned parts of whatever wood you’ve burned to heat your home, which are a carbon sequestering material.

Biochar is frequently referred to as a carbon sink, and holds onto the carbon dioxide that otherwise would be released into the atmosphere.

The charcoal in the wood ashes serves the same purpose.

Use an amount of about .5 kg of ashes to each 1 square meter of soil, and avoid using wood ashes to adjust the pH more than once every three years, as it has the potential of causing an excess potassium level.

This can cause an imbalance of other nutrients.

For slug control, sprinkle the ashes around the base of any susceptible plants, as slugs and snails won’t cross any sharp material.

Storing Wood Ashes

Only use metal containers to store wood ashes in, as plastic will quickly become brittle and deteriorate in contact with the alkalinity.

Make sure the ashes and coals are completely cold before putting them inside any building, or even beside a building – it’s astonishing how long it takes for smoldering ashes to completely cool.

Use caution when handling wood ashes as they are caustic and harmful to eyes and skin.


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Sustainable Gardening

Dolomite Lime


Sustainable Gardening

The Unbroken Circle in an Organic Garden

Learning how sustainable gardening all meshes together in a fascinating and miraculous web is all consuming for those of us that like to see how things work.

Click on the pictures to explore...

Broody hen in her box

Whether you're starting a garden or you're an experienced organic vegetable grower, here are a few easy ways to get started on sustainable gardening.

Raising some backyard chickens for eggs and compost, learning how to make compost tea, and composting are all useful skills.

Follow the composting instructions and these useful composting tips for the best compost ever.

Stucco Wire Compost Bins

Find out some ways to improve your soil with composting, making new gardens with lasagna gardening.

Solarization is an easy way to harness the suns power. See how your sustainable your garden can be.

Priory Garden Twig Fence

Learn about the 'stinking rose' - garlic and how to make garlic braids from your organically produced crop.

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