As an experiment - and because I happen to have 3 different PH meters I've tested them side by side in 3 different places in the garden.
Just to confuse you, the brown Rapitest meter has the acid/alkaline position at the opposite ends to the green Gardman ones
Photo 1 - a bucket of bought compost that had grown tomatoes
2. ground where bracken grows and I would expect to be acidic
3. an active molehill under trees
What does this prove? All the readings are around the 6 - 7 mark, with a tendency towards the topend of the 6s.
The Molehill soil is slightly more acidic than the bracken area, which has about the same borderline acid/alkaline reading as the bought compost.
The really confusing thing is that camellias grow very well here - and they are supposed to prefer acid soil with a PH of 4.5 - 5.5.
To be honest, apart from as a general indicator, I don't think they're all that meaningful. I do have one of those chemical testing kits too, but every time I find it, I really can't be bothered to use it.
Just to confuse you, the brown Rapitest meter has the acid/alkaline position at the opposite ends to the green Gardman ones
Photo 1 - a bucket of bought compost that had grown tomatoes
2. ground where bracken grows and I would expect to be acidic
3. an active molehill under trees
What does this prove? All the readings are around the 6 - 7 mark, with a tendency towards the topend of the 6s.
The Molehill soil is slightly more acidic than the bracken area, which has about the same borderline acid/alkaline reading as the bought compost.
The really confusing thing is that camellias grow very well here - and they are supposed to prefer acid soil with a PH of 4.5 - 5.5.
To be honest, apart from as a general indicator, I don't think they're all that meaningful. I do have one of those chemical testing kits too, but every time I find it, I really can't be bothered to use it.
Comment