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Garden Lime
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| Frank wrote: It is true that all these will increase soil pH but that doesn't make them equally suitable for the purpose. On a garden you wouldn't use quick lime (AKA hot lime ie CaO) which is quite harmful on the skin or especially in the eyes. It would quickly turn to slaked lime (AKA builder's lime CaOH2) and produce a lot of heat in contact with moisture in the soil. Even slaked lime is rather harsh to use on a garden as it is moderately soluble and may shock the plants and microorganisms by altering the pH quickly. Garden lime (AKA limestone, calcium carbonate CaCO3) increases pH slowly and provides calcium which is an important nutrient. Dolomite is calcium magnesium carbonate which has a similar effect on pH and provides both calcium and magnesium, magnesium is also an important nutrient. However garden lime and dolomite are not interchangeable as they will effect the calcium-magnesium balance differently. Depending on your soil and what you are growing one may be much better than the other. The moral of the story is: think carefully before adding chemicals to your soil, not just any one will do. David |
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| when is the correct time to apply lime to my lawn and garden? | amo45 | Lawn Care Forum | 0 | 04-02-2008 09:15 PM |
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