0
points
Can I add coffee grounds directly to my soil?

General   

A friend of mine says that you can just toss coffee grounds out onto the soil as a way of composting but I am not so sure about this. I thought coffee was very acidic, will that not harm my plants? can they absorb the coffee through their roots?


Posted by: Stacey Cottrell (1 point) Stacey Cottrell
Posted: February 26, 2013


Donna Adrian commented,
Coffee ground and all other kitchen scraps (except meat - or fat) are excellent for the garden, Add them to a compost pile to keep it going.
about 11 years ago.

Wurgulf commented,
I bury my meat and fat and bones in holes in the garden about 2 feet deep. I'm don't want to let any nutrients go to waste.
about 11 years ago.

James Mcleod commented,
Im far from an expert but i mix coffee grounds with ace top soil. Mixing a 5 gallon bucket with two 40 lb. Bags of top soil in a wheel barrow and spread that around the yard. And i have had great results from mine.
almost 8 years ago.



Answers

2
points
I've gotten bagsful of coffee grounds from coffee shops and added them to both soil and compost.

For soil, I found that the grounds will dry into a water-repellent crust if they are placed too thickly, say half an inch. To prevent that, just mix them with soil or cover them with mulch, and rake it all around a bit so that the grounds are not a separate layer.

For compost, many of the grounds I got were in lumps. I found that if I did not break down the lumps when I added them to compost, the lumps were still there a month or so later when it came time to sift the compost. So I placed a plastic nursery flat with small holes on the surface of the compost and crushed the lumps through the holes as I added them.


Posted by: Tanya in the Garden (128 points) Tanya in the Garden
Posted: April 4, 2013




1
point
Coffee grounds can most certainly be added to your compost and also directly to your soil. Instead of simply tossing them out though, you may wish to incorporate them a bit more thoroughly by digging them in.

Much to my amusement, I found an article from Sunset magazine where they actually sent a sample of Starbucks coffee grounds for a soil analysis and found that it was rich in nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium and all of these elements were present in a form that are easily taken up by your plants. You are also correct that coffee is acidic. Fortunately, by the time the grounds get to your soil, brewing in water has removed most of the acidity. The pH of the grounds tested was 6.2. You can read the article here:

http://www.sunset.com/garden/earth-fr...


Posted by: Lindsay McMenemy (4 points) Lindsay McMenemy
Posted: February 27, 2013




1
point
I am merely an amateur gardener but I can tell you that after hearing the same thing you did I added coffee grounds several times to my tomatoes last year and they thrived just as much as they do every year. It's only anecdotal evidence as I lack the scientific knowledge of plants that Lindsay clearly has, but I hope it helps a bit :)


Posted by: Miriam Stein (5 points) Miriam Stein
Posted: March 3, 2013


Lindsay McMenemy commented,
the scientific knowledge is sometimes no substitute for getting out there and trying it! Thanks for sharing your experiences on PlantVillage Miriam
about 11 years ago.

David Hughes commented,
Have to completely agree here. We developed PlantVillage exactly for this reason. So everyone can chime in and share experience. You might be right, you might be wrong but until we can hear from your experience how can we (the crowd, plant growers) decide? So, it is all very valuable. The other thing is that very often new and interesting ways to grow food better comes from the kind of experimentation you did with your tomatoes last year. You are experiment which is what another plant villager, David Goodman does a lot https://www.plantvillage.com/posts/407

Thanks Miriam

about 11 years ago.



1
point
I'm growing on a very beige sandy soil. I enjoy putting the coffee grounds directly on top finely spread so I can pretend I have a nice deep dark loam.

Day dreaming aside I have added about 400 lbs of coffee grounds to my backyard Starbucks giant silver grounds bags weigh maybe 10 pounds dryish each. That being said it is an organic matter and will assist in buffering soil pH. Bring low (acidic, sour) pH up and high (alkaline, sweet) pH down.

I have concentrated grounds around my garlic to mulch them and have found no discoloration associated with the ground or difference in flavor. Same can't be said about a bare hand spreading used coffee grounds though. When saving the coffee ground my work produces I compost them to break down the coffee filters, my wife didn't appreciate them blowing all around the yard.

Add a comment and or photo share your efforts!


Posted by: Wurgulf (1 point) Wurgulf
Posted: March 28, 2013




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