| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Coffee Grounds |
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JoAnn749
Registered: Posts: 1,184 |
Do any of you use coffee grounds for your figs? I just started throwing them into the garden a few weeks ago, and into my Meyers lemon tree pot. I read earthworms love them too! |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
someone on the forum once said that it gets the ants away, so now and then, i put my coffee grinds on the container for my figs. but ants came back anyway :) |
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WillsC
Registered: Posts: 1,698 |
Coffee is PH 5 and while the grounds are not nearly that acidic after the brewing process some can be depending on grind size and the coffee brewing method. Finer ground coffee grounds like espresso or coffee grounds from a french press are closer to neutral. If you are dealing with acidic soil and it is making your figs less happy it might not be a good idea. Grounds are an awesome soil amendment for a lot of plants. I grow 130+ blueberries and they love them. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
caffeinated blueberry :) |
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WillsC
Registered: Posts: 1,698 |
That would be awesome:) The grounds make a nice addition to the potting mix for BB as well. It is one of those items you can get if you have a coffee house in your area most will save the grounds for you. |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
I had placed the coffee grounds on my potted figs this summer. The ants disappeared within a week after it was applied. the used coffee grounds were added weekly. I also applied a cup of Dolemite Limestone monthly for each 5 gallons of potting mix. The only other regular application (other than fertilizer) to the figs was a regular (weekly) dusting of Diatomaceous Earth. In my opinion it worked to deter the ants. |
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garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
throw the grinds in the compost and let them juice down with everythingelse |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
I don't use grounds on my figs much because they do have acid which my citrus and roses love, so the grounds go there. Speaking of which....... Gotta go dump some grounds and make a fresh pot of coffee! |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
my ants much be like my aunt. can't function without that first cup of joe. |
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Alan1631
Registered: Posts: 145 |
I would not put coffee grounds on figs...pH too high. However, they work great on all other acid loving plants. I put them around azaleas, camelias, gardenias, blackberries and pineapple guava. I don't have blueberries but have neighbors that grow them in containers and they use the coffee grounds to lower the pH for them as well. |
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will
Registered: Posts: 226 |
My buddy has a 12 foot fig tree and his parents have been giving the tree coffee grounds for 25 years and they swear by it! |
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Centurion
Registered: Posts: 810 |
[QUOTE=garden_whisperer]throw the grinds in the compost and let them juice down with everythingelse[/QUOTE] |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
One or two table spoons of coffee grinds sprinkled around the base of the fig tree will not change the PH of the potting mix or soil. The coffee was used as an insect deterrent not as mulch or soil amendment. If the grounds are composted they become compost/ humus and may not be effective as a deterrent. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
how about unused grinds? i have a bag of coffee that my wife and i don't like too much of. |
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springlakenj
Registered: Posts: 281 |
I don't put them on the figs but throw the coffee grinds on the acid loving plants- anything that Holly Tone is recommended for, Holly, azalea, hydrangea, and evergreen. |
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WillsC
Registered: Posts: 1,698 |
Sure but unused coffee is highly acidic......it is all about volume though. A little no problem a lot maybe a problem but then only if you are dealing with native soil that tends toward the acidic. If you are on soil that is naturally alkaline you can put whatever acid bearing items you want and it will have no effect. It takes a LOT to change the native soils PH in any measurable way for any length of time. If you are putting the grounds near the trunk it will not have any effect on PH anyway as that is not where the feeder roots are. |
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BronxFigs
Registered: Posts: 1,864 |
I can't remember exactly where or when, but I think that Al (tapla) mentioned that coffee grounds are not good for fig trees. Some chemical or alkaloid in the coffee, rubs the fig trees the wrong way. How's that for a technical explanation? |
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musillid
Registered: Posts: 1,507 |
I don't know about figs, but my grandma (Swiss/German side) grew raspberries right outside the door of her house and that's where the grounds went. They sure made the raspberries happy . . . and me indirectly. |
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garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
I have praying mantis eggs i put all over the yard to keep the pest out. they do a good job too. need to go see if there are any egg cases to harvest for next spring. it can wait until morning though. |
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Centurion
Registered: Posts: 810 |
[QUOTE=garden_whisperer]I have praying mantis eggs i put all over the yard to keep the pest out. they do a good job too. need to go see if there are any egg cases to harvest for next spring. it can wait until morning though.[/QUOTE] |
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leon_edmond
Registered: Posts: 923 |
Pete- do you see an increase in fig production using the Dolomitic lime? |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
Leon, |
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musillid
Registered: Posts: 1,507 |
Nice little nuggest in yoru posting Pete. Thanks. Did you pick a particular color of bucket for any reason? |
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