SKU: 29200559509
acidic soil potting mix

acidic soil potting mix Acidic Potting Soil

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Description

acidic soil potting mix Acidic Potting SoilImprove Growth & Flower Color with Acidic Potting Soil for Hydrangeas, Blueberries & Camellias Specialized Soil Mix to Boost Blooms and Berry Production in Acid Loving Plants Give your hydrangeas, blueberries, and camellias the perfect foundation with this nutrient rich acidic potting soil. Blended for strong roots, vibrant blooms, and fruit yield, it's made to optimize plant health in low pH environments. Our acidic potting soil is great for all your

Improve Growth & Flower Color with Acidic Potting Soil for Hydrangeas, Blueberries & Camellias

Specialized Soil Mix to Boost Blooms and Berry Production in Acid-Loving Plants

Give your hydrangeas, blueberries, and camellias the perfect foundation with this nutrient-rich acidic potting soil. Blended for strong roots, vibrant blooms, and fruit yield, it's made to optimize plant health in low pH environments.

Our acidic potting soil is great for all your acid-loving plants such as azaleas, Japanese flowering magnolias, camellias, gardenias, and loropetalum these plants like their potting soil pH a bit lower. This acidic soil mix has a pH level lower than 7.0 on the pH scale, which makes it perfect for acidic soil plants. We perform a soil acidity test on every batch of soil that we hand-make here at the nursery to ensure consistency.

How to Test Soil Acidity

If you’re wondering how acidic your soil is, you can purchase a pH tester. If the acidic soil pH is less than 7 then you have acidic soil. If your soil test is above 7 you have basic soil. To learn how to lower acidity in soil or increase the acidity continue reading below.

What is Acidic Soil

This blend of high acid potting mix includes acid soil amendments such as Canadian peat moss, aged pine bark, controlled release 360-day fertilizer, granite sand, and other minor elements to provide you with the best start to amending your garden soil to be acid-loving plant soil.

How to Add Acid to Soil

If you’re wondering how to make potting soil acidic, we’ve got just what you need. To make soil more acidic, you can use coffee grounds, calcium carbonate to lower pH. By adding acid to the soil, it will help provide your soil with the alkaline it needs to be slightly acidic.

How to Incorporate Into Your Landscape

Dig a planting hole the depth of your plant and twice as wide as your plant. Mix your dug up soil with the amended Acidic Potting Soil and use this mixture to fill back in around the root ball of your plant. Pack the potting soil firmly ensuring no air holes remain and water thoroughly.

Apply the acid lovers potting mix directly to the plant roots.

Plants That Like Acidic Soil:

Blueberries– at Perfect Plant’s we offer acidic potting soil for blueberries. This tailor-made acidic soil for blueberries helps your plant’s fruit production and keeps your plant healthy for years to come.

Hydrangeas- these plants enjoy acidic soil and depending on the hydrangea acidic soil level, it could even change the flower color of your shrub.

Camellias– to maintain beautiful, flowering camellias add acidic soil to your yard.

Keep away from children and pets. Harmful if ingested.

Net weight 2 pounds.

Why Buy Potting Soil From Perfect Plants?

When you order potting soil online, be sure to order directly from the producer! At Perfect Plants we hand bag all of our soils on our family-run farm in operation since 1980.

To keep your plants healthy and full buy acidic soil online today! The Perfect Plants Acidic Soil for sale will add nutrients to increase production on flowering trees and fruiting plants.

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SKU: 29200559509

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Fern
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
I like it
Format: Paperback
In very good condition
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Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2026
M
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Mr. Stripey
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
Informative studies of how scientists are trying to address environmental issues today
Format: Paperback
In this book Kolbert travels to visit scientists attempting to address the environmental changes that humans are creating on the planet. The chapters focus on different issues, such as invasive species, and species loss, and includes field site visits, and also references for more reading. If you read this, and Sixth Extinction, and Field Notes From a Catastrophe, you will get a great oversight of some of the environmental issues that we face, although not any neat solutions. All the case studies build up into a wider understanding.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2023
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Dave of Dublin
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 3
disappointing
Format: Hardcover
I was excited to read "Under a White Sky". Unfortunately, it seems that the author just sort of stopped writing when COVID hit. See page 197, where author laments the arrival of COVID. FOur pages later, book ends. The author even says on page 197: "Here I was, trying to finish a book about the world spinning out of control, only to find the world spinning so far out of control that I couldn't finish the book". Couldn't finish the book, but COULD publish it and sell it to people like me. The early chapters are interesting, each one covering a different topic related to man messing with nature. Good stuff. But I expect some analysis, some conclusion, something to sum it all up. It just isn't there. Topic and early chapters showed great promise. But the ending is truly lacking. And as the author alludes, unfinished.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2021
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Immer
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 4
As A Dominant Species, We Dance On The Razor’s Edge
Format: Hardcover
Under A White Sky Elizabeth Kolbert’s claim to fame is her book The Sixth Extinction. In comparison Kolbert’s under A White Sky is rather short and disorganized, yet her coverage of those working on solutions to Climate Change is pretty darn interesting.  In her conclusion, she writes, “This has been a book about people trying to solve problems created by people trying to solve problems.” Putting this sentence at the book’s beginning rather than buried at its end would have provided a reader a compass to help determine where Kolbert was going with her dialogue. As she wades through the reversed direction of the Chicago river; Asian carp; Cane toads; forced and accelerated evolution in regard to coral, in particular in regard to the Great Barrier Reef (without discussing the importance of the worlds reefs; the continual flooding of New Orleans both despite and because of the actions of The Army Corps of engineers, one begins to ponder a general connection that might exist, while the book itself is headed toward a two star rating. Then, Kolbert got to Global Warming and Climate science. The book’s last sixty pages are worth the complete price of admission. The chapter begins with carbon sequestration, the pros and cons of how it can be done, and does it also contribute to the growing problem. The stoppered bathtub” analogy is perhaps the best analogy I’ve heard in regard to the anthropocentric carbon dioxide problem on the Earth. The tub is full of water/ the sky’s CO2 level; the tubs stoppered, so the water isn’t going anywhere, and the atmosphere’s increased CO2 level won’t drop in the near future either; and even if the water flow to the tub is reduced, it will still accumulate until over flowing, as will reduced emissions continue to amass in the atmosphere. In a sense, we are already beyond the tipping point in terms of global temperature increase. Harvard University Center for the Environment director Dan Schrag says, “I’m a scientist. My job is not to tell people the good news. My job is to describe the world as accurately as possible.” He predicts, due to the fact that the oceans must equilibriate. “If we were to stop CO2 emissions tomorrow, which of course isn’t possible, it’s still going to warm for centuries. That’s just basic physics.” Thus enters the topic of geoengineering, and the connection with people trying to solve problems created by people trying to solve problems truly comes into focus. Kolbert , in a rather clandestine way connects the dots of her past “local problems”, but now the problem fix, if it doesn’t work could create problems beyond solving. She hits the nail on the head with this. Humans have been around 35-50 thousand years, but only the last ten thousand or so have they thrived, largely due to agriculture and differentiation of what one can do because of agriculture. But ag has only been able to thrive because of the rather consistent global weather of the past ten thousand years, due to glacial retreat. This has been presented in great detail by Jared Diamond in his book Guns, Germs, and Steel. The CO2 we’ve put into the atmosphere isn’t going anywhere, as we continue to pour more into the mix. Her interviews with climate scientists do not bode well for our species, as everything they think of to combat the CO2 conundrum brings more as the bathtub continues to fill. One could say humans have become victims of their own success as a species. Ultimately, one gets the feeling from Kolbert and her interviews, that the enormous fluctuations in the Earth’s climate over geological time, and those yet to come, render whatever we do as humans as a moot point. The Earth will shake is off as a dog rids itself of fleas. She also brings to the argument, when the blank really hits the fan, as it will despite, or because of any preventative efforts by man, the resulting population displacements will be staggering. A sobering, informative book as we, as a species, dance on the razor’s edge.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2021
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Christine Liu
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
fascinating and compellingly written
Format: Hardcover
Elizabeth Kolbert is one of my favorite nonfiction authors. She has such a knack for writing in a clear, compelling way that makes you think and marvel and ask questions you've never considered before. In her previous book, The Sixth Extinction, she catalogs all the ways in which humans have drastically changed the natural world, ushering the new age of the Anthropocene. Under a White Sky is an exploration of the ways scientists around the world are trying to undo those changes. There are people engineering unique solutions to combat a variety of environmental threats: invasive carp in the Chicago River and cane toads in Australia, Louisiana's rapidly disappearing Mississippi River delta, rare species that now depend entirely on human conservation for their continued survival, and, perhaps most pressingly, the problem of rising carbon emissions and global climate change. That there are brilliant minds working innovatively to solve these problems inspires optimism. But these sobering portraits really highlight the extreme human measures it takes to keep at bay the problems caused by humans interfering with nature in the first place. We've already transformed the planet; how much more will it be transformed by these interventions, and in what ways?
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Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2021

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