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How much succulent do you buy? Dig a spot at the door and mix it with it. One cent doesn't cost 10 pots!

Hank Schrader
2020-07-21 08:16:25
Many flower friends tangle about what kind of soil to use for meat. There are various kinds of soil on the market, and the price is not low! Huahua thinks it's a waste to buy soil. It's not as good as the soil we match!

Naturally fleshy

Succulent originally grows in the poorer environment, have no requirement to soil fleshy

The picture below is full of meat in the wild.

The fleshy nature is so tenacious

What kind of soil do you use to raise more meat at home?

But we want to grow more beautiful and meaty, of course, we need more fat soil. The special soil available on the market is as follows:

It seems that it's not very troublesome. Don't worry about it. We can teach you some simple soil matching methods by spending one cent.

Rotten leaf soil.

Rotten leaf soil is the common soil around us, which can replace coconut bran soil. It is rich in various nutrients, and fully meets the various nutritional needs of fleshy!

There is a lot of rotten leaf soil under the roadside trees, but it seems that there are a lot of impurities. We can pack up the finer soil, mix with a little sand, and use it to breed meat.

There will be eggs and bacteria in the outdoor soil, which can be exposed to the sun for sterilization. It's better to spray it with carbendazim solution or insecticide.

Cinder soil.

The burnt coal balls are of many uses. Step on them with your feet, wet them with water (it's better to wet them with carbendazim solution, which can be disinfected and sterilized), and then dry them to make them finer. Add a little kitchen garbage to increase nutrition, peanut shell, meat and bone are OK

After that, you can use it by drying it and crushing it. When you load the basin, you can add some coarse sand and cinder to keep the air and fluffy environment. Meat is more like it.

Eggshell soil

Don't worry about finding flower friends who can't find rotten leaf soil and cinder. Egg shells can also be added to the common garden soil as nutrient soil.

naturally fleshy

Grind the eggshells, put them on the bottom of the basin, or mix them into the common soil. Are the meat plump?

The fixed meat can also be thrown into a bit of broken eggshell to supplement nutrition and avoid invasion of snails and slugs.

As shown in the picture, a sharp broken eggshell can scratch a snail

Protect with eggshell

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The Plant Aide - Plant experts around you

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