5 Recipes for Blending Your Own Soil Mixes — Empress of Dirt (2024)

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Thesesoil mix recipesare from the new book,Urban Farming: Sustainable City Living in Your Backyard, in Your Community, and in the World (2nd Edition), by Thomas Fox. Find out how to make homemade growing medium for starting seeds, rooting cuttings, and growing potted plants.

For sowing seeds, also seeSeed Starting for Beginners: Sow Inside Grow Outside.

5 Recipes for Blending Your Own Soil Mixes — Empress of Dirt (1)

Seed Starter and Potting Mix Options

5 Recipes for Blending Your Own Soil Mixes — Empress of Dirt (2)

This selection fromUrban Farming: Sustainable City Living in Your Backyard, in Your Community, and in the World(2nd Edition) by Thomas Fox, was provided by Companion House Books.

You can buy or make your own soil mixes for seed starting, growing cuttings and potted plants.

1 This explains the basics for understanding soil mixesand why you need them.

2 There is also information onsoilless substratesused to adapt to unique growing environments.

3 Click here to jump to thesoil mix recipes.

Soil Mixes

Commercial Mixes

The easiest solution, especially if you’re planting small-scale, is to buy a commercial soil mix. Soil mixes are readily available, not too expensive, and well calibrated in their balance of water and air, nutrients and pH, and biotic and abiotic matter.

Potting soilor potting mix is usually the way to go with container plantings. It tends to be light, well-drained, nutrient-rich, and composed of things such as sphagnum moss, perlite or vermiculite, and composted animal manure—frequently a “soilless” mix.

Garden (or planting) soil (or mix)tends to be somewhat heavier but still well draining, high in biotic matter, and filled with nutrients. It is often made specific to certain kinds of plants (vegetables, citrus, ornamentals, and so on), and is meant to be mixed with existing topsoil. It’s probably the way to go with most raised beds.

Commercial topsoilis generally the heaviest, cheapest, and least porous. Still, it may be better than your own topsoil. It is intended mainly for filling in depressions and improving your own soil.

Related:Buying Soil For Your Garden? Read This First

Garden Soil Tips

5 Recipes for Blending Your Own Soil Mixes — Empress of Dirt (3)

Soil | The upper layer of earth in which plants grow, a black or dark brown material typically consisting of a mixture of organic remains, clay, and rock particles.
Mulch | Placed on soil, organic mulch can protect soil, retain moisture, and gradually fertilize the garden.
Leaves | Finely chopped fall leaves make excellent mulch.
Leaf Mold | Decomposed fall leaves beneficial to soil structure.
Compost | Decomposed organic matter providing nutrients for the garden.
Potting Mix | Contains no soil: designed to optimize plant growth in pots.
Seed Starting Mix | A lightweight potting mix for sowing seeds in containers.
Soil pH | Knowing your level (which may vary) is informational, not a call to action. Most soils fall in the range of 5 to 8 and accommodate a wide range of plants.
Free Soil Calculator Tool | Estimate how much you need and what it will cost

Homemade Mixes

Another option is to buy commercial soil products and blend them yourself.

  • Try to do this outside, away from wind, and with the ingredients lightly moistened first.
  • Keeping a spray bottle at hand to dampen any dust is probably a good idea, as is wearing a mask and gloves.

Most mixes contain something to retain moisture (peat moss, sphagnum moss, coir, or other biotic matter), something to increase porosity (perlite, vermiculite, or sand), and something nutritious (compost, leaf mold, or biotic/abiotic fertilizers).

Lime is often added to naturally acidic peat mixes to balance the pH.

Note that

  • the compost should always be mature
  • the vermiculite almost always “horticultural”
  • the sand almost always coarse (such as builder’s sand—not fine or tropical sand)

You can use finer grades of vermiculite and sand in seed-starting mixes.

Peat Moss

Peat (sphagnum peat moss) has been widely used in potting mixes for years. Harvesting peat requires the destruction of irreplaceable carbon-sequestering ecosystems (bogs). Coconut coir is often suggested but it too has limitations with its carbon footprint. Hence, the quest for a sustainable alternative continues.

Soilless Substrates

There may be as many fans of soilless media as there are of soil.

Some of the soilless options are organic (in the chemical sense, meaning that they contain carbon and used to be alive) and some are inorganic (may or may not contain carbon and are abiotic).

Many packaged and prepared soilless media contain a blend. In fact, all three seed-starting mixes previously mentioned can be considered “soilless.” Two out of the three are sterile, and sterility is a common point in favor of soilless media, particularly when plants are at their most vulnerable.

Yet soilless media are sometimes favored for the whole life cycle of the plant.

At theUnited States’ Antarctic research facility at McMurdo Station, for example, perlite/vermiculite blends are used to grow vegetables and herbs, in part to avoid contaminating the pristine Antarctic environment with foreign soil microbes.

McMurdo Station grows its food in the simplest kind of hydroponic set-up: the static solution method. Plugs holding the plants are immersed in a bucketof nutrient solution. The perlite and vermiculite give the plant roots something to grab onto and facilitate aeration. In fact, all of the nonnutritive abiotic soil amendments previously discussed are used as hydroponic substrates, as are some of the biotic ones (coir, for example).

Hydroponic and Aeroponic Methods

Some methods of hydroponics, such as the nutrient film technique (NFT), don’t even use substrate as we’d commonly think of it. In NFT arrangements, slightly angled channels made out of PVC pipe or other materials allow a constant shallow trickle of recirculating solution to reach the bare roots of plants, which are inserted into holes on the top of the channels.

Aeroponics takes hydroponics a step further, maximizing root exposure to air as well as water and nutrients. It employs a high-pressure mist of nutrient solution to feed a plant’s bare roots. Aeroponics uses even less water than hydroponics, which is itself very water-efficient. NASA has experimented with aeroponics for space travel, and there are many aeroponic kits commercially available, from a $100 unit to grow herbs to entire turnkey aeroponic farms.

Green Roofs

Green roofs also usually employ soilless substrates. It’s a tricky situation. The substrate can’t hold too much water because of the load stress on the roof, yet it has to hold enough for plants while simultaneously letting air get to the roots. It also has to be light itself to avoid putting too much pressure on the roof, but not so light that it blows away.The green roof on Chicago’s City Hall, for example, weighs about half per cubic foot what topsoil does.

Germany has been at the cutting edge of green-roof design for decades, and best practice calls for following the design guidelines of a German nonprofit, Forschungsgesellschaft Landschaftsentwicklung Landschaftsbau (The Landscape Research, Development, and Construction Society), known, for obvious reasons, as FLL. Extensive or intensive, single layer or multilayer, soil or bulk material, a green roof’s substrate is subject to exacting specifications by FLL. There are many proprietary substrate mixes for green roofs, often calibrated to the type of roof and location. They usually combine a lightweight aggregate material with organic matter.

Related: Biochar as a Soil Amendment (Pros and Cons)

Recipes for Blending Your Own Soil Mixes

1Basic Potting Mix

  • 1 part topsoil (your own or store-bought)
  • 1 part biotic matter (compost, leaf mold, coir, or peat moss)
  • 1 part sand,perlite, orvermiculite(or combination thereof)

2Sterile Seed-Starting Mix #1 (“Peat-lite”)*

  • 1 part vermiculite
  • 1 part sphagnum peat moss (note: not considered sustainable)
    *These ingredients, combined with dolomitic lime and fertilizers, comprise the classic “Cornell Peat-Lite Mix A.”

3Sterile Seed-Starting Mix #2

  • 1 part vermiculite
  • 1 part perlite

4 Microbial Seed-Starting Mix

  • 2 parts vermiculite or perlite (or combination thereof)
  • 1 part fine compost or leaf mold

5Cuttings Mix

For rooting plant cuttings

  • 1 part vermiculite or perlite (or combination thereof)
  • 1 part sand
  • 1 part sterile soil or peat moss (for sterile version) or fine compost
    (for microbial version)

Urban Farming (2nd Edition)

About the Book

This comprehensive guide to urban agriculture will answer every up-and-coming urban farmer’s questions about how, what, where, and why. This second edition of Urban Farming walks city and suburban dwellers down the path of self-sustainability, with practical advice and inspiration from today’s urban farm movement.

Urban Farming | Amazon

~Melissa the Empress of Dirt ♛

Free Online Soil Calculator Tool

Estimate how much you need and what it will cost.

5 Recipes for Blending Your Own Soil Mixes — Empress of Dirt (5)
  • Garden beds
  • Raised beds
  • Window boxes
  • Flower pots or urns
  • Soil
  • Potting mix
  • Mulch
  • Compost

Soil Calculator Tool

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5 Recipes for Blending Your Own Soil Mixes — Empress of Dirt (2024)

FAQs

What is the 5-1-1 mix? ›

The 5-1-1 mix is made up of 5 parts bark, 1 part potting soil or peat moss, and 1 part perlite.

How do you blend your own soil? ›

Add one gallon of moist, coarse sphagnum peat moss, followed by one gallon of coarse sand, perlite, or vermiculite. Adjust the texture of the medium to create a loose, well-drained mixture. Sand feels gritty and clay feels sticky. If the potting soil feels too sandy, more peat moss should be added.

What is the best soil mix homemade? ›

NOTES: A simple effective potting mix recipe is to use 75% Peat Moss + 20% Vermiculite + 5% Perlite. It is easy to rehydrate in the event that it completely dries out. This mix is especially good for a sterile potting mix that will be used indoors.

What is the perfect soil blend? ›

The Formula for Soil Mix

To create your own perfect soil mix, thoroughly blend 1 part peat or coir, 1 part perlite or vermiculite, one-half part composted bark, and one-half part worm castings.

What is 5 1 1 soil mix for citrus? ›

We recommend using a commercially available citrus potting mix like our Primo Potting Mix or making our 5-1-1 mix. This mix consists of 5 parts fine bark (aim for 1/2" pieces), 1 part perlite, and one part potting soil. This mix will break down very slowly, allow for adequate drainage, promote healthy root growth.

What is the best soil mix for tomatoes? ›

To grow that perfect tomato full of flavor, it's best to plant them in loam or sandy soil. A solid soil structure is vital to allow proper airflow and water into the soil, which could greatly influence plant development.

What is triple mix soil? ›

Triple Mix: A combination of peat moss, compost and top soil. A light soil mixture that is good for top dressing lawns or adding to garden beds to improve the existing soils structure. Black Earth: Mostly soil but will sometimes contain manure or other additives.

Is it cheaper to make your own soil? ›

Before we go any further, note that if you only need a few small containers' worth of potting mix, you may actually be better off buying a pre-made mix! Making your own is usually only economical on a large scale.

What is the best soil for beginners? ›

The idea soil is a balanced loam, which consists of 50% (or less) sand, between 30-50% silt and between 10-25% clay. The ranges show variation in the possible structures for loam soils, but in general loam soils do everything right. They are rich in nutrients, retain moisture well but also drain well.

What is a good topsoil mix? ›

An excellent soil mix can be prepared by mixing equal parts topsoil, organic matter (well-rotted manure, compost, or peat), and coarse sand.

What is the best soil composition? ›

The ideal mixture for plant growth is called a loam and has roughly 40% sand, 40% silt and 20% clay. Another important element of soil is its structure, or how the particles are held together - how they clump together into crumbs or clods. A loose structure provides lot of pore spaces for good drainage and root growth.

What kind of soil does fiddle leaf fig like? ›

Best Soil for Fiddle Leaf Figs

Use an Indoor Potting Mix or our Fiddle Leaf Fig Soil. We recommend augmenting the indoor houseplant soil with one-third to one-half cactus potting mix, like the one Perfect Plants specially formulates for succulents and cacti, to improve the drainage and aeration around the roots.

What is 3 in 1 mix? ›

3 in 1 All-purpose soil mix: A blend of Peat Moss, compost and humus. It is an optimized blend to blend into existing soils or to use on its own when planting lawns, flowers, shrubs and trees.

What is the best potting soil for citrus trees? ›

Citrus need well drained soil, so selecting the right potting mix is important. Commercial potting mixes with peat moss, perlite, vermiculite and compost are fine to use as long as the soil is light enough to drain water well.

What is perlite? ›

Perlite is a lightweight granular material that's white in colour. It looks and feels like little bits of polystyrene but is actually made from expanded volcanic glass, heated to 1000°C until it 'pops' (like popcorn) to many times its original size. It's lightweight, sterile, and easy to handle, and is long-lasting.

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