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View Full Version : Using Coffee Grounds in your Garden


Julie-Ann
13-01-2012, 10:15 AM
Recently my Mum was telling me that she has been adding their coffee grounds to some of her plants. I had never heard of this but Mum is getting some great results. So I Googled the topic and this is what I found here (http://organicgardening.about.com/od/soil/qt/coffeegrounds.htm):

If you make a daily pot of coffee, you have a fabulous source of organic matter right at your fingertips. In compost jargon, coffee grounds are a "green," meaning an item that is rich in nitrogen (yes, I know coffee grounds are brown. In your compost, they're green. Trust me.) Coffee grounds are approximately 1.45% nitrogen. They also contain magnesium, calcium, potassium, and other trace minerals.
There are several ways you can put used coffee grounds to work in your garden:

Put coffee grounds in your compost bin. As noted above, they are a valuable source of nitrogen.
Add grounds directly to the soil in your garden. You can scratch it into the top couple inches of soil, or just sprinkle the grounds on top and leave it alone.
Create a slug and snail barrier. Coffee grounds are both abrasive and acidic, so a barrier of grounds placed near slug-prone plants may just save them from these garden pests.
Make coffee ground "tea." Add two cups of used coffee grounds to a five-gallon bucket of water. Let the "tea" steep for a few hours or overnight. You can use this concoction as a liquid fertilizer for garden and container plants. It also makes a great foliar feed.
Add coffee grounds to your worm bin. Worms love coffee grounds! Add some to your worm bin every week or so. Just don't add too many at once, because the acidity could bother your worms. A cup or so of grounds per week for a small worm bin is perfect.

I have 2 very old ficus trees in pots. They are struggling this year so I am experimenting on them. I will let you know if I think it makes a difference.

Have you tried this before or heard of it?

Julie-Ann
20-01-2012, 05:20 PM
I am thrilled to report the old trees that were struggling are covered in new shoots:clapping:. I am going to put coffee grounds on some of our plants that are struggling in the garden. Poor DH will have to drink a lot of coffee for me:D.

Sooty
20-01-2012, 07:49 PM
That's interesting, I'd heard about it deterring slugs/snails but not the nutrient content. Will remember this for when I plant my garden.

Di
20-01-2012, 08:24 PM
Great idea. I'm going to give it a try. :thumbs up:

Suzpol
21-01-2012, 01:32 PM
I've used it in the garden before. I get confused between tea and coffee for the garden. Can never remember which I'm meant to use it on my roses and which on my camellias.

I use crushed eggshells for a slug and snail repellent. Don't crush them too finely as it's the sharp points they don't like.

bells
22-01-2012, 09:36 AM
I was just talking to DH about this yesterday so thank you for the information on how to use our coffee grounds.

Cheers