Do people find the water retention properties of multi purpose compost varies a lot?
I live in London so my choice of convenient compost sources is rather limited, so I often buy whatever is cheapest at my local b&q, often the 120l bags of own brand.
This time the only thing they had left was peat free, and knowing that I should probably be switching to this anyway I bought some. I'm noticing after watering that almost all the water comes out the bottom, and the soil is completely dry at the top much more quickly. Most of the compost I buy behaves differently than this - water would only come out from the bottom if I really saturated it.
Is this desirable, poor quality, or is that dependent on what I'm growing? I know a lot of things talk about free draining compost, and I know sand and grit is sometimes added under the guise of improving drainage, but this stuff drains instantly.
I thought it was maybe the peat that made compost more absorbing, but a bit of googling put doubt on that.
I've just realised how dull this post is, sorry...
I live in London so my choice of convenient compost sources is rather limited, so I often buy whatever is cheapest at my local b&q, often the 120l bags of own brand.
This time the only thing they had left was peat free, and knowing that I should probably be switching to this anyway I bought some. I'm noticing after watering that almost all the water comes out the bottom, and the soil is completely dry at the top much more quickly. Most of the compost I buy behaves differently than this - water would only come out from the bottom if I really saturated it.
Is this desirable, poor quality, or is that dependent on what I'm growing? I know a lot of things talk about free draining compost, and I know sand and grit is sometimes added under the guise of improving drainage, but this stuff drains instantly.
I thought it was maybe the peat that made compost more absorbing, but a bit of googling put doubt on that.
I've just realised how dull this post is, sorry...
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