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Aged Manure
Many gardening books blithely recommend, almost as a knee jerk reaction, “aged manure” as a primo amendment for soils in the home landscape. This material is usually used as a fertilizer rather than as a mulch although it is a perfectly legitimate addition to the menu of your earthworms and soil microbes.
Dried Manures
Whether you are setting out new trees and shrubs, preparing a vegetable garden, or getting flower beds ready for spring planting, dried manure is a wonderful material to mix with the soil at planting time.
joe gardener -- Gardening, Landscaping,Horticultural Resource
As they say, necessity is the mother of invention and thanks to the clever thinking of a family of dairy farmers; CowPots was invented as a way of solving that problem while providing a valuable resource to gardeners too!
Planting Allium
If necessary, improve drainage by building beds higher than the surrounding soil surface and add lots of organic matter (such as rotted manure, leaf mold or peat moss) to the soil.
Planting Hyacinth
If possible, loosen the soil 1 foot deep when preparing the bed for planting because hyacinth bulbs develop very deep roots. Fill in the hole and cover the bed with mulch to protect it from heaving during winter temperature fluctuations.
Manure
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