Your fireplace is a built-in source of garden fertilizer, and wood ashes can be used to repel pests, too.
June 19, 2015
Your fireplace is a built-in source of garden fertilizer, and wood ashes can be used to repel pests, too.
Like lime, ashes from a fireplace or wood-burning stove can raise the soil's pH, but they dissolve so quickly that they also can burn plant roots and injure earthworms and beneficial fungi.
To stay on the safe side, fertilize with ashes at least a week before you plant.
Store wood ashes in metal garbage cans with tight-fitting lids.
Ward off slugs and snails by encircling your plants with a ring of ashes about 15 centimetres (six inches) from the stem. The soft-bodied creatures will turn away.
Don't add briquet ashes to compost or your garden. Chemicals make ashes from your barbecue off-limits.
Shovel still-warm ashes into a covered metal container and place it in the centre of a cold frame or in your greenhouse. The ashes will radiate heat for about 24 hours.
Spread ashes on icy walkways to provide traction. Some of the ashes will stick to shoes, so be sure to use multiple doormats to keep them from being tracked into the house.
Birds flutter in ashes to get rid of parasites, and country gardeners who keep poultry can provide them with an ash bath.
Easily retrieve their info anytime you need it on any of your devices