Advice needed on re-fertilising!!

Discussion in 'Compost, Fertilisers & Recycling' started by barryman, Apr 18, 2012.

  1. barryman

    barryman Gardener

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    I'm quite a new gardener and need expert advice. About two years ago, when I moved into my new house, I put various shrubs into the borders, plus a couple of fruit trees. I also planted cuttings which seem to have survived - so far. But I made a bit of a mistake.

    The problem is that, with hindsight and subsequently reading tips, I think I should have prepared the soil better before putting plants into the ground. I should have lined the bottoms with rich, crumbly compost etc, but I didn't! However I don't want to dig them out now and risk killing them so what can I do to improve the soil around cuttings/shrubs etc without actually removing them?? Any treatments/fertiliser regimes to recommend???
     
  2. lazydog

    lazydog Know nothing but willing to learn

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    Personally I would lightly fork in well rotted manure this will help with feeding and also act as a mulch and will work its way down into the lower layers.
     
  3. merleworld

    merleworld Total Gardener

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    Manure or compost on the top - as lazydog says, lightly fork it in. You could add in some blood fish and bone as a slow release fertiliser.

    Our friends the earthworms will eventually pull the compost/manure down into the soil, so I do it annually :)
     
  4. Kristen

    Kristen Under gardener

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    Yup, mulch. I put 2" - 3" on well rotted manure on my shrub border (planted about 3 years earlier) last Summer and the ground is already in much better heart. I didn't fork it in, but planting out additional plants this spring, and needing to stick a fork in deeply to get some Dandilions out, and the like has the effect of mixing it in a bit.

    General purpose fertilizer ("Growmore") around the plants would help. You could use a Tomato fertilizer when the plants are flowering (start a few weeks before they flower)
     
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