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Quality bedding plants require careful selection of potting media, and attention to the way the plugs and pots are subsequently potted and watered. Together, these 3 factors form an integral foundation for successful bedding plant growing. This article, part 1 of 3, deals with the selection of the growing media.
The Purpose of Growing Media A quality growing media must have certain mechanical and chemical properties. Mechanical properties, detailed in this article series, include providing an anchor for the plants, making oxygen and water available to the roots, and acting as a reservoir for nutrients. Chemical properties include having the proper pH and Caption Exchange Capacities to allow nutrient availability to the plants.
Focus on the Roots Water or Air? The ideal environment is thus one which is rich in oxygen and saturated with water vapors. As water uptake and gas exchange take place in the same pore space in the growing media, they are unfortunately also mutually exclusive. From a mechanical point of view, a growing medium can consist of almost any type of solid material (peat moss sphagnum, vermiculite, sand, etc) as long as it is capable of striking a suitable balance between air and water at the same time. The solids themselves are actually somewhat irrelevant; the interesting properties are the pore spaces which they form. The sizes and shapes of these pore spaces are also referred to as the growing media's "porosity".
Porosity
The copyright of the article Quality Growing Media in Seeds & Plants is owned by . Permission to republish Quality Growing Media in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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