Browse Forums Landscape & Garden Design Re: Soil improvement enquiry 13Jul 15, 2009 9:44 am Thanks everyone for their suggentions. Fu, the other products I mentioned - (Liquid Humate and Seasol +) are both made by Seasol. I just asked because those two products come in much larger amounts than the Powerfeed and Seasol. I was also wondering what the difference was between those commercial products as opposed to the consumer products other than the amounts. Do you have any suggestions on controlling Oxalis without killing the groundcover it's trying to mingle with, or kidney weed, or another little dicot weed that seems to spring up everywhere and looks like a blackberry without the spikes (and not dock)? I've just tried a concoction of Zero, a little bit of Seasol and red food colouring, but it's very hard to paint on without getting any on the good plants. Cheers, Jamie Re: Soil improvement enquiry 14Jul 15, 2009 11:19 am You can kill the oxalis by .... well you're stuffed sorry pull it out for the next 100 years. Paint on some glyho and take a few hits in what you want to keep. If you can get the seasol in the commercial quanties and the related products, do it The liquid humate of theirs is the retail powerfeed. Re: Soil improvement enquiry 15Jul 15, 2009 2:54 pm Thanks again Fu. I went past PlantMark again today, actually scouring for some plants and had a look again at some of the products. The GroundBreaker stuff (in my initial post) looks pretty nasty. The directions say to hose off from foliage after you use it, water it in well the next day and to avoid runoff. That doesn't fill me with confidence There seem to be 4 commercial Seasol products available in 20L packs - Seasol + Plus, Liquid Organic Humate, Powerfeed and one with a soil wetting agent in it (which I certainly don't need). One other question. Does anyone know of a native plant version of blood and bone? B&B looks a bit high in phosphorus and I have a few natives including 3 grevilleas (which I'd like to keep). Cheers, Jamie Re: Soil improvement enquiry 16Jul 15, 2009 9:14 pm Phosphorus sensitivity is only applicable to native plants that are Proteaceae. Even then not all are as sensitive as others. try blood and bone that is just blood and bone without anything added. Otherwise try the seamungus product by neutrog any of their stuff is pretty good Also Garden gold for natives Really tight at the top of the stairs- how to get furniture into those rooms? Study books - does anyone really use them these days? Large storage closet would be more functional. 2 6895 Hi, Looking to add an ensuite to one of the bedrooms and make it a Master BR. Please see the attached current floorplan. Need suggestions on what's the best way to do… 0 7341 I am not sure whether Perth has its own way of doing things in regards to this. Most of Perth has class A (sandy soil), except for some areas near rivers or hills. 2 13107 |