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elly29_gw

Cactus soil?

elly29
17 years ago

I don't want to spend money on store bought cactus soil. What is in it so I can mix my own?

Comments (43)

  • xerophyte NYC
    17 years ago

    I agree with s_n_b, DO NOT USE PEAT!!!!

    Mix some decent garden soil from your yard with perlite 50-50, that's about as inexpensive as you can get unless you have access to chicken grit or fine gravel in bulk for cheap, instead of perlite.

    The only thing that I don't like about perlite is that it will float to the top of the soil, if this bothers you, use something heavier like gravel.

  • fred_grow
    17 years ago

    I recommend that you bite the bullet and buy the cactus soil. By the time you buy enough ammendments to sufficiently lighten garden soil you may as well. Unless your garden soil is naturally light and fluffy and you have free access to grit, sharp sand or pea gravel. Your plants will do so much better it will be worth it. I buy the cactus soil AND perlite to further increase drainage. In my opinion cactus soil, even though marketed to use straight from the bag still isnt light enough if you are growing cacti. Some folks will probably have different experiences.

  • shrubs_n_bulbs
    17 years ago

    The main problem with buying the cactus soil is that most of the ones on the market are C*R*A*P, with or without extra perlite, and I wouldn't put any of my plants in it. If you can recommend a specific brand that isn't made from peat then we'd all love to hear it, but just picking a random one off the shelf is going to cause you grief down the road.

  • fred_grow
    17 years ago

    I use Schultz brand cactus and succulent mix mixed 50/50 with perlite. Dont know whether it contains peat or not, only that my plants thrive, grow and bloom. On rot prone species like my Sulcorebutia I use 1/3 schultz, 1/3 perlite and 1/3 aquarium gravel. I wouldn't use garden soil under any circumstances, even if it is sandy loam. No matter how good the garden soil in my opinion it always presents drainage issues when placed in a pot. Not to mention it being a potential source of plant pests. I would think even a bit of peat would be a better alternative.

  • shrubs_n_bulbs
    17 years ago

    Schultz brand is made from a mix of sphagnum and sedge peat (varying by region, I think) with sand and perlite. Some growers seem to prefer this, it is not so "spongy" as some peat products, a little more like a loam soil. But it is still peat. And sedge peat in particular breaks down quickly into a clogging sludge.

  • eileen_plants
    17 years ago

    I used a standard, storebought cacti soil mix and its been a disaster. Its made of peat and sand and when I attempt to water the plants, the water just runs right off without being absorbed. Did I, as someone suggested above, let the soil get too dry? SHould I repot with new soil? Perlite seems to be a popular component, maybe I should try that...thanks.

  • fred_grow
    17 years ago

    That seems to be another of the problems associated with a peaty mix, once it does dry out its almost impervious to water. One trick I have used with nursery stock is to place just a couple small drops of dishwashing liquid on the surface of the soil before watering. Sounds bizarre but the water will soak right in and I haven't had it harm the plants. I use lots of perlite. Its very light. It will eventually break down but by then you're ready to repot anyway. I dont have any problem with floating because I top dress my cacti with gravel. We all have our pet receipes and what one says to never do is routinely done with great success by others...

  • fred_grow
    17 years ago

    Heres a good for instance; one of my prettiest cactus is a Ferocactus latispinus potted up in (are you ready for this?) Miracle Grow Moisture Control! No added perlite, grit, gravel or anything. The cactus has quadrupled in size this summer and is absolutely pristine. Show quality. Of course it is potted into unglazed clay which is all I ever use and top dressed with gravel which I find very beneficial in many ways. Your potting mix will not crust over with this gravel mulch for instance.

  • shrubs_n_bulbs
    17 years ago

    Commercial wholesale cactus growers, the places that produce all those plants for the big box stores, grow almost exclusively in peat, the cheapest they can find and usually without any added perlite or grit. They keep the plants moist 24/7 and fertilise heavily. They also use fungicides and insecticides in their daily overhead sprays. The plants grow extremely fast and are generally pristine when they hit the stores, they are also extremely light for shipping once the peat is dry. So it can be done. You can grow a cactus in anything including a glass of water (seriously, you can) but that doesn't mean you should. Everyone who tries it eventually learns that there is something better.

  • fred_grow
    17 years ago

    Yes Shrubs the root balls on those little box store cacti are always caked in a heavy ball of soggy peat. Sometimes with moss growing on the surface. I pick as much of it as possible off as soon as I get home and repot.

  • xerophyte NYC
    17 years ago

    Fred

    You mentioned that you planted a Ferocactus into Miracle-Gro mix and it is growing beautifully - as well it should, there is fertilizer in there and it probably has excellent qualities, but I would bet that if you kept the plant in that pot without changing the soil, you will see the plant decline or stall after a few years.

    There is some great info I read once about the poor chemistry of peat moss after it degrades, I will look for it and post it.

    I have been using garden soil mixed with gravel for over 10 years - drainage is not an issue, and the clay in the soil holds nutrients better than peat ever would. Not to mention there is minimal breakdown because there is minimal organic matter, I have some dwarf varieties that haven't been repotted for 10 years and they are healthy and flowering.

  • fred_grow
    17 years ago

    Yes out of 50 cacti and 20 or so succulents I have ONE potted in miracle grow moisture control because it was all I had at the time. I kept meaning to repot but the cactus was doing beautifully so I never did. It now needs a larger pot and when I give it one (probably next spring) it will go into my usual mix. Which is 1/2 Schultz and 1/2 perlite with a gravel top dressing. If I am dealing with a rot prone species I add lots of gravel to the mix. As shrubs has pointed out Schultz cactus mix is made from peat. I am well aware of what happens to peat when it breaks down and of the dangers involved with using a mix that contains too much peat. I get excellent long term results with the mix that I use. My cacti thrive, grow beautifully and bloom well. So obviously a small amount of peat is not necessarily a guaranteed disaster.I plan to continue using it because IT WORKS FOR ME. And that is my whole point. Im not saying my way is right and everyone elses is wrong, Im relating what works for me. Isn't that what a discussion board is for?

  • eileen_plants
    17 years ago

    Fred,

    When you say "gravel top dressing" I'm assuming you mean that literally, that is, gravel covering the soil at the top of the pot. I bought a sedum morganianum with this arrangement and wound up taking off all the gravel because I couln't tell when the soil was overly dry. Should I put some gravel back? What is the purpose? HOw do you tell what the status of the soil is with the gravel on top? SOrry for all the questions, but as you can tell I'm a newbie to succulents and plants in general for that matter. I have recieved a lot of help at this website, for which I (and my plants!) am very grateful.

  • xerophyte NYC
    17 years ago

    Fred - If it ain't broke, don't fix!

    eileen - make sure the gravel you use is light-colored, dark rock can get hot! you can always keep an empty pot with the same soil mix nearby the pot with plants + gravel, and water them all the same and check the moisture level in the "empty" pot - it's just an idea, but you really are better off at first without gravel. Once you learn your plants' growing and water needs, you can add gravel, and then you water based on how the plant looks and not on the actual moisture content. With succulents, always underwater if not sure.

  • fred_grow
    17 years ago

    You should absolutely positively put the gravel back. IF you want it to be there.LOL! Actually That is the big complaint with top dressing--which is just a fancy name for rock mulch. Its hard to tell when the soil has dried. And the soil will be slower to dry out with it on. Which aint necessarily a good thing. I use it because it keeps the soil from washing out or splashing up on to the plant when it rains. It also keeps your perlite from "floating" if you use perlite. It helps to support newly set plants and allows water to drain quickly away from the base of the plant. It also keeps the top of your soil from crusting and presents a nice finished look to the planting. You can get creative with contrasting colored or go art-deco with pink or blue gravel if that sort of thing appeals to you. But alot of people want to be able to see and feel the soil to judge moisture content. Its another of those personal preference things. You can have stunning plantings with or without it. If you use it you will learn to judge by the weight of the pot whether it needs water or not, or you can brush the gravel aside, feel and then replace it.

  • mitzi1956
    16 years ago

    well im seeing different things going on here i assume were talking about growing regular cactus, and not so much epiphyllums right? i used regular cactus soil from the store when i did mine and put gravel on top and my cactuses are doing very well growing like weeds. i dont even check to see if they need watering as there under a porch i just automatically water them once every 7-10 days and their thriving great. actually their ougrowing their pots after 1 year. lol.

  • olelander
    16 years ago

    I agree that it is not going to save you money to mix your own....atleast not if you want to have a decent media mixed up. I have been using orchid bark, potting soil, perlite and vermiculite. all at roughly equal parts....I am actually curious about making a mix in which orchid bark is the predominant ingredient because it seems that perlite and garden soil eventually end up caking up and hardening....has anyone ever done this?

  • xerophyte NYC
    16 years ago

    I have been using perlite +/- fine gravel with garden soil successfully for many years. For me, it works better for most cactus and succulents than anything else. If totally dry, it does harden superficially but breaks apart easily with gentle poking.

  • murmanator
    16 years ago

    I just came into a large quantity of pumice at a great price and decided to mix up a batch of soil. Previously I had been using Black Gold Cactus Soil cut with equal parts pumice for most of my plants. This had worked for me for the most part. But I was curious to try something a little different, so.....I mixed appx. 5 parts sifted garden soil, 5 parts pumice and 3 parts coarse sand. My garden soil is on the clay side and it had been sifted to remove all the big pieces of gravel and such (for another project). Anyway, I tested the drainage of this mix and it was not very good. Water sat on the soil for a minute or so before draining out and the soil really hardened up when it dried. What can I do here... mix in more pumice and/or sand? Is this soil salvagable?

  • xerophyte NYC
    16 years ago

    many of the south african mesembs, like lithops, thrive in this type of heavy mix. you just need to be careful with watering.

    i use a similar 50-50 mix of garden soil and drainage, but garden soil as you can imagine is extremely variable.

    i would avoid adding more sand otherwise you end up making cement. try adding more pumice until the drainage suits your needs. the good thing about garden soil is that it breaks down very slowly and will last many years.

  • shrubs_n_bulbs
    16 years ago

    In this case you need to ignore the advice to use coarse sand because it will only make your clay-ey loam stiffer as the sand grains lock together and not really improve the drainage enough for planting succulents.

    Either use sufficient pumice without sand to get the results you need.

    Or mix your garden soil with a finer soft sand until you have a sandy loam. You might need as much or more sand than the soil you start with, a sandy loam is up to 80% sand and only about 10% clay. This isn't easy and often you just end up with balls of your original soil coated in sand, it is easiest if you mix completely dry ingredients so that the clay loam can be crumbled. Two parts sandy loam, if you can get it, plus one part pumice works for most cacti, more pumice for the really sensitive ones. Heavier loams like yours can be used but you have to adapt your watering and they work best in hot dry climates.

  • murmanator
    16 years ago

    Well I am certainly in a hot and dry climate! THanks for the tips, I will give another mix a try this weekend.

  • txcactus
    16 years ago

    I just potted my cacti up in a mix of 1 part cactus soil, 1 part aquarium rocks/gravel, and one part orchid mix. Will they die? I've read so many different recipes here I became very confused.

    Also, when trying to get the soil that they come in (from Walmart/Home Depot) off the roots - don't wet it thinking it will make it come off easier. It becomes like concrete!

  • kimisdad
    16 years ago

    I am a specialty commercial grower of Apocynaceae which includes Adenium, Pachypodium and Plumeria. We also grow other succulent types such as Euphorbia melii and Stapelia gigantia and an assortment of Cacti and Cycad specimens. This is a informational post only and I wish it not to become a rift among the many Garden Web members. This issue of soil mix seems to be a very hotly debated subject with many having very rigid feelings about certain ingredients and how long they last in a container over several years. I have been commercially growing in Southern California for over fifty years. And that was before plastic containers and flats were invented. Much of this time was spent designing soil mixes and as the technology developed soilless mixes for commercial growing. All mixes were continually analyzed by "Soil and Plant Laboratory Inc." a International Lab. (http://www.soilandplantlaboratory.com/) that provides soil, plant, and water analysis, consulting and diagnostic services to the agricultural, horticultural and landscaping industries.

    I have observed both criticism and some excellent scientific explanations for many of the issues repeatably with little consideration for some regional conditions which may effect the science. However I only see a few photos of members results.

    We have been using a particular mix for the last eight years for everything we grow after propagation. This includes mother plants for cuttings and many specimens which we only re-pot every five years. Also, this includes some container grown specimen plumeria trees that are thirty seven years of age. The mix we use is made-up of regional materials on the West Coast. The mix consists of plus or minus 2-3% of the following ingredients:

    Canadian Sphagnum Peat Moss 30%
    Coarse Redwood and Fir mulch 30%
    Nursery Sand 10%
    Horticulture Pumice 1/2 -3/8", 1/2-5/16" 30%
    (Check out this link for Horticultural pumice info; http://www.clppumice.com/horticultural.html
    This link for more general info; http://www.clppumice.com/index.html)

    The following is a few photos of living and growing proof this mix works!

    {{gwi:601735}}

    {{gwi:477632}}

    {{gwi:477631}}

    {{gwi:601740}}

    {{gwi:601742}}

    {{gwi:4537}}

  • shrubs_n_bulbs
    16 years ago

    I'll take two of the Pachypodiums, Jack. Do you think they'll go in the post to England without anyone noticing?

    Many plants would of course die very quickly in your mix, if it was used in England. Likewise, your big succulents would quickly die of thirst in my mix for Lithops, Copiapoas, and North American cacti, especially in your climate.

  • kimisdad
    16 years ago

    Greetings from So Cal,

    We could say the package is a antique street lamp post lol and ship. Bet it would be more than a few quid lol.

    This is one of the points I wish to make. I continually see "facts" from persons with out the background knowledge of growing conditions in a specific climate or environment. I must admit I have never grown a plant outside my area so I could only give an opinion on how to grow in the UK or most anywhere else. Even growing in a greenhouse would be different in the UK than So. Cal.

    I like this quote from many years ago from Bernard M. Baruch an economist in the US: "Every man/woman has a right to be wrong in his opinions. But no man has a right to be wrong in his facts."

    {{gwi:4537}}

  • dusty1too
    10 years ago

    I was given an aloe vera this winter which got a bit of frostbite, and I'm a newbie to succulents other than Christmas cactus. It seems to have recovered from the shock, but I'm concerned about the medium in which it's planted. It appears to be just plain ol' local garden dirt, which is very sandy with not much nutrition in it. Pretty acid, as we're in a mixed hardwood/pine forest location.

    The water sits on top of the soil for a minute or two before seeming to run right through to the catch tray. Takes awhile for it to then be absorbed up into the plant. I've been very frugal with the watering.

    I'm thinking that repotting it and using one of the mixes described in this forum might be a better environment for it. But without any experience with aloe vera, I'm hesitant to just forge ahead without a bit of direction.

  • wantonamara Z8 CenTex
    10 years ago

    Aloes and cactus do not need nitrogen. If it is native soil, mix it with grit ( perlite, gravel, decomposed granite). At least 50/ 50. maybe more of the grit. That should get the water moving.

  • lostinthe90s
    10 years ago

    I have heard 50% regular soil and add in hummus(sp) You can get it at Tac stores and its used in horse stalls. What is your alls opinion on that?

  • wantonamara Z8 CenTex
    10 years ago

    I think you are talking about DRY STALL. It is not available in Central Texas or at least in my haunts..

  • lostinthe90s
    10 years ago

    It's called pumice. I think it's like those stones you use on the bottom of your feet?

  • rina_Ontario,Canada 5a
    6 years ago

    If you read some posts on this forum or search for gritty mix, you'll get lots of ideas how to make fast draining mix.

    What ingredients do you have? What is your general location and/or growing zone? - that info should be put next to your name as most ppl do (look at other ppls names) What succulents do you have?

  • rina_Ontario,Canada 5a
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    I grow many succulents, and keep them all in very gritty and inorganic mix - no mulch, no sand (unless it is grainy, I do not know what Hoffman's is like). I don't add any soil or bark either.

    Crushed granite that is about 2-5mm is good. Same with perlite. Turface is usually smaller, I sift it and keep bigger granules. Those are ingredients of my mix, in approx. 40-40-20% ratio (sometimes less turface).

    Charcoal doesn't do much for plants; if it is 'right size' - you could add bit of it in your mix but I wouldn't go looking for it.

    Depending on climate you are in (I asked in my previous post) - you may not need anything else besides grit, perlite and some turface...

  • socks
    6 years ago

    EB Stone cactus mix has no peat. Not sure if it's widely available, but it is in So. CA. Probably could still be amended further when using it.

    https://www.ebstone.org/products/eb-stone-organics

  • rina_Ontario,Canada 5a
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    I like how well it drains - keeping succulents outdoors, I do not have to worry about drainage when it rains. But if you like, use some good soil - but not too much. As I already mentioned, it could depend bit on your climate.

  • socks
    6 years ago

    Christopher, if you are referring to the EB Stone link, here's a cut/paste from the Cactus Mix:

    Contains: Pumice, Fir Bark, Aged Redwood and Sand.

    I know some people don't like sand, but it is the last ingredient.

  • SpanishFly - (Mediterranean)
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    This thread just shows there are as many favourite mixes as there are growers. I grow mostly Mexican desert cacti, and I try to emulate their conditions in habitat. I use a coarse gritty mix, with limestone and some topsoil, with a little organic material, wormcasts and kelp meal, for nutrition. They seem to do well on it (but we all say that). I totally avoid peat, coir and perlite as they are foreign materials to my plants. But lots disagree with me. I would just say that most ´cactus soil´ would appear to be unsuited to desert cacti - invariably full of acidic peat and even ´forest product´ - read sawdust.

  • SpanishFly - (Mediterranean)
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    For €1.50 I get a bag I can barely lift.

  • rina_Ontario,Canada 5a
    6 years ago

    In Canada, I buy chicken grit - small granite grit that is given to chickens. I get it from farm supply stores and it as approx. $10 for 22kg bag...similar to what Peter gets as granitos :)

  • Karen S. (7b, NYC)
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    Getting back to soils I have something to share. I recently tried to buy a bag of Hoffman Cactus & Succulent mix. Guess what the first 2 ingredients were? Peat Moss & Sand, so I didn't buy it.

    Am frustrated as I can't find mix locally to buy. I tried last summer & some packages didn't list ingredients at all; others listed content by region like: if in Georgia, contains ABC, if In California contains XYZ, but none listed my area in the Northeast. GRRRRRRRRRRRR!

  • kingd Z6A michigan
    6 years ago

    Karen,

    I too ran into the same issue until by chance I wandered through a small grocery store with a greenhouse and found Sun Gro Black Gold. It also has different ingredients depending on region but no peat or sand. Google it to see what you think, They also list local venders too I think.

    I have not tried it yet but it was cheaper than the stuff in the big box stores. You might want to try the local grow shops if you have any near you also.

  • Karen S. (7b, NYC)
    6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago

    Hi Kingd,

    Thanks for trying, but on searching them as suggested, here's what I find in their

    Black Gold® Cactus Mix

    for

    • Houseplants
    • Outdoor Containers
    • Indoor Containers

    Ingredients

    Contains: Horticultural Grade Perlite, Pumice, or Cinders, Earthworm Castings, Compost, Bark

    So I appreciate you trying to help, but I don't really want these components for indoors in containers. Even tho' they recommend themselves for Indoor/Container.

    Maybe if I only used 30% or so & the rest Perlite or Pumice. So frustrating.