would add some perlite or vermiculite, if you can find it. no sand when dry it gets like a brick. doesn't take much as the coco drains and holds plenty water.
Ezzer, this is what i use. It is called coco peat here but it comes in the blocks shown at the bottom of the page. Soak them in water and boom you get a bucketful of great growng medium. It does hold water well. I put gravel in the bottom of my pots to assist in excess water draining out.
The only coir I've seen here is uncompressed, it's sold in 5 litre bags. Costs around $0.75 a bag! Did you mean to give a link on your post?
cheers.http://www.greeneem.com/cococoirpeat.htm I forgot the link doh
Patrick here they call it coco peat.coco Cori, and plain coco all the same stuff some of it is a little hairy some is just like peat moss depends on who they buy it from the best stuff comes from Thailand right now may change next week happy growing Alex
Thanks Alex. I should have known different places different names. Hope I didn't offend anyone. I would like to see what they call coco peat though.
According to the International Peat Society, yes there is such an animal, peat is: a heterogeneous mixture of more or less decomposed plant (humus) material that has accumulated in a water-saturated environment and in the absence of oxygen.
Its structure ranges from more or less decomposed plant remains to a fine amorphic, colloidal mass. The warmer the climate, the quicker the plant material will decompose. The rate of accumulating plant material is greatest in areas where the temperature is high enough for plant growth but too low for the vigorous microbial activity that breaks down the plant material. Such conditions are found more frequently in the northern hemisphere.
Does "coco peat" meet the definition? Not trying to one up anyone or be a smart ass.
I buy a lot of coco coir in compressed form. One "brick" makes about eight quarts after adding water. I use it for starting seeds and for a substrate I use in my tarantula cages. If you're going to use it to grow peppers in it's got zero nutrients so you have to fertilize the peppers from the onset of growth.
Srin, what sort of percentage of coco peat/coir do you use in your mix? Plus I've been to just about every plant shop in town and I can't get perlite anywhere not sure what i can substitute, anyone got any ideas?i got the pictures of my coco peat and coco coir
this is the picture of the coco peat.which is a by product from extracting the coco coir.
and this is the picture of the coco coir.
hope it could clear some coco products issues.
i think i used abt 1/3 of coco peat 1/3 compost add sand and perlites and also some burned soil.Srin, what sort of percentage of coco peat/coir do you use in your mix? Plus I've been to just about every plant shop in town and I can't get perlite anywhere not sure what i can substitute, anyone got any ideas?
i think i used abt 1/3 of coco peat 1/3 compost add sand and perlites and also some burned soil.
anyway i got this info from another forum abt perlite,
"ACK and FreshGardens both have small bags and large bags.Both are off Suk, Next stop past The Emporium(FG) and Oh Nut(ACK). KU Nursery by JJ(weekend market) may have small bags."
hope you understand that?
Ok, looks like I'm going to the builders merchants tomorrow, Cheers Srin thanks for the advice.well thats was only sand. so no nutes nothing.. how to grow ? well what i am doing is mixing washed sand into the mix to have better drainage.
From all the googling I've been doing, it seems to a few different names. Coco Peat is one of them. I guess it's a marketing strategy, it's not peat, but that it's name. Have a look at JKTAwhite's link just above, the product he buys is called "Coco coir peat"
Chuckle!nice women too