Top Garden Myths of all Time – 20 Million Visitors

Last week we reached the 20 million visitor mark on this blog and I want to thank all of you for supporting this site.

The very first post was called, What Does Organic Mean, and it was posted on September 6, 2012. I was getting fed up with all the myths I was seeing in gardening literature and online and thought that I might be able to change a few minds. At the time, I figured I had enough material for about 100 myths. I have now posted 688 articles containing some 2,000 myths and have another 326 drafts started. I won’t run out of material any time soon!

I’d like to thank you for reading my posts and I want to ask for your help. Go to your favorite social media outlet and post a link to this post. Let others know how much you like this site. Let’s get to 30 million soon.

To celebrate I thought I would go back in time and review some of the most important articles.

fireworks with 20 million visitors written across them
20 Million Visits to Garden Myths – Time to Celebrate

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Does Peat Moss Acidify Soil?

Some very desirable plants, like rhododendrons, azaleas, and blueberries, demand acidic soil, and many gardeners have alkaline soil, which is not suitable for growing these plants. The most common solution I’ve seen is to mix peat moss with the soil to produce an acidic environment.

Peat moss is acidic, so it makes sense that if you add some to your soil, the resulting soil will also be more acidic. But is this really true? How long does the acidity last? Can gardeners with alkaline soil use peat moss to grow rhododendrons, azaleas, and blueberries?

Does peat moss change soil pH?
Does peat moss change soil pH?

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Biochar – Does it Really Work in the Garden?

Biochar is a special kind of charcoal that seems to have many benefits as a soil amendment. It holds water, acts like a fertilizer and grows bigger plants. While doing all this it is also eco-friendly and sequesters carbon in the soil for many thousands of years. Sounds like a win-win-win.

What is biochar? Are the claimed benefits real? Should gardeners be using this product to amend their soil? Let’s check it out.

Different samples of Biochar, photo from UC Davis Biochar Database
Different samples of Biochar, photo from UC Davis Biochar Database

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Brix, Molasses and Pests – New Science or Fantasy?

I watched an interesting video describing the fact that pests don’t feed on healthy plants. How do you measure plant health? Simple. Just take a Brix reading.

Around the same time I became aware of the fact that spraying molasses on plants not only increases Brix values but also creates healthier plants with fewer pests. This has become a very popular technique among dahlia growers and seems to have some support from gardeners.

Let’s dig into the connection between Brix, molasses and pests.

caterpillar chewing on a leaf and a bottle of molasses.
Do insects only eat healthy plants?, source: Depositphotos

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Best Fertilizer for Indoor Plants and Containers

There are so many types of fertilizer that it’s hard to know which one to use. Which NPK ratio is best? Is one brand better than another? Organic vs synthetic. Soluble vs slow release. This all seems so complicated, but in this post, I will simplify the whole process of selecting the best fertilizer.

  • The best NPK ratio for most plants is 3-1-2, some like 3-1-3.
  • There is no such thing as plant-specific fertilizer.
  • Mix fertilizer so nitrogen is at about the 100 ppm level.
  • Fertilize with every watering, and use just water once a month to flush the pot.
Girls watering a plant
Best Fertilizer for Indoor Plants and Containers

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The Latest Science on Soil Health

Most gardeners now understand that a healthy soil is critical to good plant growth and a successful garden. Many of you are also beginning to understand that it is the soil microbes that make healthy soil. Unfortunately, that has lead to a lot of myths about how microbes should be used. Companies are making this worse by supplying microbial products that have not been shown to work.

The latest science has made it clear that it is even easier to build good soil than we thought. Some of the old techniques still work, but there are new methods that are even more powerful.

plant roots covered in thin film of soil
Well developed rhizosheath indicates healthy soil, from Microbe Science for Gardeners, original source: Fred Price, Gothelney Farm

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Using Conductivity (EC) and pH Measurements to Control Hydroponic Solutions

Hydroponics can be a great way to grow plants but it is important to make sure the nutrient solution contains enough food for the whole growth cycle. If either pH or EC (electrical conductivity) is out of whack, plants grow poorly or stop growing all together. It is therefore important to measure and control the nutrient solution. This post will look at what the numbers mean and what you should do about them to keep plants growing well.
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  • Keeping the pH and EC in the preferred range is important for plant growth.
  • Use EC and not TDS for measurements and online discussions.
  • Nutrient lockout does not really exist, but is important to understand.
an EC meter superimposed on tomatoes growing hydroponically in deep water culture.
EC should be measured for both the deep water culture and Kratky methods

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Do Squash and Pumpkins Need Sun to Ripen?

Does the fruit of squash and pumpkins need light to complete its ripening process? Should you remove leaves so that sun can get to the fruit to speed up ripening? If pumpkins are picked green, should they be left in sunshine or not?

  • Most answers in Google on this topic and many other gardening topics is wrong.
  • Sunlight is not required to ripen fruit.
fall display of pumpkins, wall nuts and leaves.
Pumpkins and Squash for Halloween, source: Depositphotos

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Attracting Ladybugs to Your Garden

Ladybugs, also called lady beetles, ladybirds and ladybird beetles, are one of the gardeners best friends because they eat aphids and other pests. What attracts these beneficial insects to your garden? Is it the plants or the aphids? Are there plants you can grow which will bring more into your garden?

  • Plant selection is more important than having aphids.
  • Ladybugs eat much more than just pests.
  • Volatile chemicals are the key to attracting and keeping ladybugs.
Ladybug eating aphids, source: Depositphotos

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Dr. Elaine Ingham and The Soil Food Web School

Dr. Elaine Ingham and the Soil Food Web School promote a number of controversial topics in soil management and in this post I would like to have a closer look at a number of these.

  • There is little scientific support for the benefits of compost tea.
  • F:B ratio is probably the result of plant growth, and not a driver for plant selection.
  • Looking at microbes under a microscope has limited value for gardeners and market gardeners.
diagram showing the soil food web with lots of different organisms each each other

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Molasses for Plants

This is a hot gardening topic these days, and many organic gardeners are promoting the idea that you should add molasses to your compost pile, to compost tea, or even spray plants with it. In tea and on soil, it makes microbes grow, and on plants, it can prevent pests.

Molasses: Should you eat it or use it in the garden?

A family of ginerbread cookies.
Molasses is better for cookies, source: ะ™ะพะฐะฝะฐ ะŸะตั‚ั€ะพะฒะฐ

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When Should You Harvest Peppers?

Peppers come in many colors; green, yellow, orange, red and even purple, but when is the best time to pick them? Will they ripen after you harvest them? If they ripen indoors are they as good as vine ripened ones? Let’s have a close look.

  • Peppers can be picked before they are fully ripe.
  • Peppers will continue to ripen once they are picked if they are picked at the right maturity stage.
  • Fully ripe peppers are not the hottest ones.
pepper plant with several peppers, some yellow, some red, some green, some partly red.
Which of these peppers should be picked?, source: Depositphotos

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