What's the easiest, or most innovative, or most accurate, method for testing the ph of soil?

Just don't bother.What's the easiest, or most innovative, or most accurate, method for testing the ph of soil?
That's my remedy, too - I just keep on improving the soil as much as I can, taking every opportunity I can to add a bit more compost, mulch, chook poo, yesterday's newspaper ...the remedy is still to add plenty of humus/compost to your garden.
true but surely if you are choosing to grow them as an indication for you soil phMillymollymandy wrote:Hydrangeas don't work - there are some that are bred to be pink even if you have acid soil - and you can make them blue in alkaline soil by adding sequestered iron!
I think I meant by looking at existing ones i.e. in the neighbourhood!possum wrote:true but surely if you are choosing to grow them as an indication for you soil phMillymollymandy wrote:Hydrangeas don't work - there are some that are bred to be pink even if you have acid soil - and you can make them blue in alkaline soil by adding sequestered iron!
1. You would choose and old fashioned variety that flowers according to the soil pH
2. You wouldn't intentionally make them blue in alkaline soil just to confuse yourself!
Many soils don't have the full complement of minerals - there is often a lack in some parts. Trees are useful for bringing up minerals from below the soil but that takes time. My mention of humus/compost includes animal/bird manure as well. For the self-sufficientish principle to work then the animals need to be given minerals in the form of salt blocks at my place to take account of quite a lot of deficiencies where I am.Jack wrote:Gidday
Yeah, but Robin, that's the scientific ways. Therefore if you want to follow that line you gotta go chemical farming. Just leave it to nature and put on as much un-decomposed green vegetable matter as you can onto the surface or top layer of the soil and nature will do all the hard expensive work for you and in doing it will release all those trace elements from the mineral content of your soil for free.