Posted by The Henchman on February 27, 2010, 10:17 pm
We have indoor potted plants and trees and will soon have an indoor herb
garden, once I get off my lasy ass and build some shelving and wire some
lights.
Our water is softened and also charcoal filtered. I have since discovered
that miracle gro might not be suitable for potted plants because of the
residue it leaves behind. Therefore I am looking for a natural organic
alternative to feed potted plants with water form a water softener.
Winter is 5 months long with snow on the ground for 4 of those months so
grass clippings is not a year round solution. We have no compost bin
because our town collect food waste but is there food waste I can divert to
the pots? Coffee grounds, tea grounds, veggie scrapping from the plates?
Remember these are indoor pots so smells count, and our water source is
softened water.
Any ideas?
Posted by Phisherman on February 28, 2010, 9:31 am
wrote:
>We have indoor potted plants and trees and will soon have an indoor herb
>garden, once I get off my lasy ass and build some shelving and wire some
>lights.
>Our water is softened and also charcoal filtered. I have since discovered
>that miracle gro might not be suitable for potted plants because of the
>residue it leaves behind. Therefore I am looking for a natural organic
>alternative to feed potted plants with water form a water softener.
>Winter is 5 months long with snow on the ground for 4 of those months so
>grass clippings is not a year round solution. We have no compost bin
>because our town collect food waste but is there food waste I can divert to
>the pots? Coffee grounds, tea grounds, veggie scrapping from the plates?
>Remember these are indoor pots so smells count, and our water source is
>softened water.
>Any ideas?
Don't use softened water. Is your cold water supply softened too?
Rainwater or melted snow is ideal. (Fresh water) aquarium water is
another excellent water source for plants.
Coffee grounds, veg table scraps, leaves, etc go to the compost pile,
not into potted plants (why encourage knats, roaches, mold, mice?). A
good compost pile won't have a disagreeable odor, but it still needs
to be outdoors. Our city collects kitchen waste too, but mine goes to
the compost pile rather than the city dump.
Go easy with Miracle Grow. I found that it can be very harsh on some
plants. I dilute it more than recommended, especially for potted
plants.
I have had much better success growing herbs outdoors in the full sun.
Posted by brooklyn1 on February 28, 2010, 9:52 am
>wrote:
>>Our water is softened and also charcoal filtered. I have since discovered
>>that miracle gro might not be suitable for potted plants because of the
>>residue it leaves behind. Therefore I am looking for a natural organic
>>alternative to feed potted plants with water form a water softener.
>>
>>Winter is 5 months long with snow on the ground for 4 of those months so
>>grass clippings is not a year round solution. We have no compost bin
>>because our town collect food waste but is there food waste I can divert to
>>the pots? Coffee grounds, tea grounds, veggie scrapping from the plates?
>>Remember these are indoor pots so smells count, and our water source is
>>softened water.
>>
>>Any ideas?
I seriously doubt the water at your outdoor hose bibs is softened.
Posted by The Henchman on February 28, 2010, 10:54 am
>>wrote:
>>
>>>Our water is softened and also charcoal filtered. I have since
>>>discovered
>>>that miracle gro might not be suitable for potted plants because of the
>>>residue it leaves behind. Therefore I am looking for a natural organic
>>>alternative to feed potted plants with water form a water softener.
>>>
>>>Winter is 5 months long with snow on the ground for 4 of those months so
>>>grass clippings is not a year round solution. We have no compost bin
>>>because our town collect food waste but is there food waste I can divert
>>>to
>>>the pots? Coffee grounds, tea grounds, veggie scrapping from the plates?
>>>Remember these are indoor pots so smells count, and our water source is
>>>softened water.
>>>
>>>Any ideas?
> I seriously doubt the water at your outdoor hose bibs is softened.
Our kitchen cold water is softened as is all indoor taps. As was said
winter is five month long here. I'm not using outdoor taps because they
will freeze. There are no shut-offs from the inside to the outside taps, a
flaw in the original plumbing that I will address, once my list of 6000
other things is done.
Posted by The Henchman on February 28, 2010, 11:02 am
> Don't use softened water. Is your cold water supply softened too?
> Rainwater or melted snow is ideal. (Fresh water) aquarium water is
> another excellent water source for plants.
I used softened water once in the past two months we have lived here. We
recently upgraded our softener and decided to put the kitchen cold on the
softener as well because of the filtering system we installed. Other than
that it's been bottled spring water from the grocery store.
Is there any type of organic fertilizer to mix with the softened water or is
that an idea best to be forgotten?
> Coffee grounds, veg table scraps, leaves, etc go to the compost pile,
> not into potted plants (why encourage knats, roaches, mold, mice?). A
> good compost pile won't have a disagreeable odor, but it still needs
> to be outdoors. Our city collects kitchen waste too, but mine goes to
> the compost pile rather than the city dump.
Yeah I thought diverting scraps into indoor pots was a dumb idea.
>garden, once I get off my lasy ass and build some shelving and wire some
>lights.
>Our water is softened and also charcoal filtered. I have since discovered
>that miracle gro might not be suitable for potted plants because of the
>residue it leaves behind. Therefore I am looking for a natural organic
>alternative to feed potted plants with water form a water softener.
>Winter is 5 months long with snow on the ground for 4 of those months so
>grass clippings is not a year round solution. We have no compost bin
>because our town collect food waste but is there food waste I can divert to
>the pots? Coffee grounds, tea grounds, veggie scrapping from the plates?
>Remember these are indoor pots so smells count, and our water source is
>softened water.
>Any ideas?