Mix compost yourself: instructions & procedure

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You can process your own or purchased compost into compost soil by mixing it with other ingredients. We provide suitable tips and instructions.

Hands dig into substrate
You can flexibly produce your own compost according to your needs [Photo: TippyTortue/ Shutterstock.com]

Anyone who owns a compost heap or can obtain cheap compost can produce compost soil flexibly and according to their needs. Below we give you instructions for compost-based potting soil for summer flowers, vegetables, cuttings and seeds as well as herbs and woody plants. You can also find more here Benefits of having your own compost heap and in this article you will learn all about the properties of compost.

tip: If mixing it yourself is too much effort, you will find high-quality ones in our shop Organic potting soil for various plants.

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  • Mix compost for summer flowers
  • Mix compost for vegetables
  • Mix compost soil for summer flowers in the bucket
  • Mix compost soil for cuttings and for sowing
  • Mix compost for herbs
  • Mix compost for woody plants

You have your own compost and would like to mix potting soil with it? With a view to the needs of different plant groups, we have put together a few mixtures for you that you can easily make yourself. You can sterilize your own compost before use to kill pathogens and weed seeds. This can be done either in the preheated oven (10 to 20 minutes at 200 °C) or in the microwave (10 minutes, 800 watts). However, only heat three to five liters of compost at a time so that the entire quantity is sterilized evenly. If sterility is not extremely important to you - for example for the cultivation of young plants - you can safely skip this step. Eventually, by doing this, you will also kill any other useful life in the compost.

All the figures below are given as percentages by volume, so you can mix with a very large measuring device or just a green thumb and a sense of quantity.

Mix compost for summer flowers

summer flowers on beds and borders are usually annuals and are used to a consistently high supply of nutrients from their cultivation, which the substrate should offer them. You can spread this out before sowing or planting and/or put it in the planting hole for each individual plant.

Marigolds, ornamental sage and chrysanthemums
Marigolds, ornamental sage and chrysanthemums are often only used as seasonal plants [Photo: dvoevnore/ Shutterstock.com]
  • 60% finished compost
  • 20% fresh compost
  • 10% shredded leaves of ericaceous plants
  • 10% bentonite or vermiculite
  • Some horn meal

Mix compost for vegetables

Compost soil for vegetables should not contain too much nitrogen, so as not to hinder fruit set through excessive vegetative growth. Since mainly tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum) and cucumbers (Cucumis sativus) have a high water requirement, good water retention is also useful to survive hot summer days better.

  • 70% finished compost (alternatively: 50% finished compost, 20% fresh compost for crops with high nutrient requirements)
  • 20% xylitol (alternatively: 10% coconut fiber and 10% coniferous wood shavings or crushed leaves from ericaceous plants)
  • Something more organic long-term fertilizer (if the compost was made from nutrient-poor material, then a little more)

Mix compost soil for summer flowers in the bucket

Potted plant soil should store water for a long time and keep it readily available without too little oxygen being available at the roots. Nutrients should also be available long-term and evenly in order to minimize the maintenance effort.

  • 50% finished compost
  • 20% wood fibre, preferably from softwood
  • 20% coconut flour (cocopeat)
  • 10% bentonite or vermiculite
  • Some organic long-term fertilizer (if the finished compost was mainly made from green waste, then a little more - if the finished compost was mainly made from organic waste, then a little less)
  • Some horn meal

Mix compost soil for cuttings and for sowing

Compost soil for young plants must be low in nutrients and well permeable to air. Although more frequent watering is necessary, the resulting roots become strong and do not rot.

Seedlings on a window sill
Cuttings and seeds develop better in a special substrate mixture [Photo: Skeronov/ Shutterstock.com]
  • 50% mature compost (alternative: coconut flour (cocopeat) and bark humus)
  • 30% perlite (alternatively: rice husks)
  • 20% xylitol (alternatively: 10% coconut flour (cocopeat) and 10% softwood shavings or crushed leaves from ericaceous plants)

Mix compost for herbs

The vast majority of herbs would grow satisfactorily in reasonably good, humus-rich garden soil. Ideally suited – especially to Mediterranean to plant herbs – is, however, a well-drained, slightly nutrient-poor soil.

  • 30% mature compost
  • 40% sand
  • 30% coconut fibers (alternatively: mature compost and sand each 50%)
  • Some rock dust
  • Some slow-release organic fertilizer

Mix compost for woody plants

shrubs like that boxwood (boxy) are occasionally cultivated in tubs. There is also a very suitable and simple mixture with ready-made compost for them.

  • 60% finished compost
  • 40% broken bricks
  • Some slow-release organic fertilizer
boxwood seedlings
You can first propagate the boxwood in the cuttings substrate and then repot it into the woody substrate [Photo: Martin Metsemakers/ Shutterstock.com]

Tip:Make your own compost

Would you like to make your own potting soil, but don't have your own compost? If you are still unsure, this article may be able to help you understand the benefits and workload of the compost heap treated. Composting is an ancient principle that you too can carry out with a little background knowledge, practice and the right equipment. The principle is simple: the composting is carried out by small and tiny creatures - worms, snails, bacteria, fungi and insects. However, good composting is only possible if the living conditions are good enough. The right selection of the compost material, any auxiliary materials, the right composter and the location are crucial for this. And you will need a bit of patience, because it can take up to two years to rot until the compost matures. Everything you need to know about "Compost properly' you can read about in this special article.

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