For many of us, there’s nothing we’d rather do than relax with a cup of coffee near the flower garden. Most people don’t realize however that the grounds used to make our coffee can help to increase the health and beauty of our garden. Here’s what you’ll need to know before re-using your coffee grounds for flowers.
Are Coffee Grounds Good For Flowers?
Used grounds can be very helpful to flowers. And that’s why so many people decide to reap the benefits of them in the garden instead of just throwing them away. They provide nutrients that are crucial for plant health such as nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium among others.
Another thing that makes coffee grounds good for flowers is that they can help to improve the quality of the soil that your flowers are growing in. Once in the soil, the grounds help to retain moisture and water, which can allow roots to have access to them during dry conditions.
Because worms eat coffee grounds their presence will help to attract worms to your garden. Worms excrete castings that are full of nutrients that can be easily absorbed by flowers. They also create tunnels that help aerate the soil and create space for roots to grow.
Coffee Grounds And pH
It’s important to remember that used coffee grounds can often have a pH that is slightly acidic. And when added directly to non-acidic soils, over time it can lower their pH levels to slightly acidic levels as well. In fact, many gardeners add grounds to their garden for this very reason.
What Flowers Like Coffee Grounds?
While coffee grounds can benefit just about all flowers, not all types of flowers prefer the acidic conditions grounds can create when applied to the soil. If the flowers in your garden don’t like acidic soil you can simply add your coffee grounds to your compost. And when that compost matures you can add it as a soil amendment to your garden.
Coffee grounds can help to create very high-quality compost that is rich in nutrients and organic material without the added acidity. In general, flowers that like coffee grounds are those that thrive in acidic or slightly acidic soil. For these types, you can use grounds to help to create those conditions by adding them directly to the soil.
Once they have cooled down, simply sprinkle the grounds on top of the soil surrounding your flowers, or dig them in. Roses like coffee grounds and so do daffodils. Lily of the valley and hydrangeas like them too. In fact, hydrangeas and coffee grounds share a special relationship. By adding grounds to the soil around white hydrangeas they will eventually change to blue.
Using coffee grounds for flowers can help them to stay healthy and produce beautiful blooms you’re sure to enjoy. However, if you are adding them directly to the soil, just remember to check first whether or not your flowers prefer acidic or slightly acidic conditions. If they don’t, you can always throw your grounds in your compost instead.
Start Shopping for Gardening Supplies!
4 Steps to Get Your Garden Ready for Spring
After being cooped up all winter, you may be dreaming about harvesting from a lush summer garden. But before you get there, there’s a lot of work to be done to get the garden ready. Spring garden prep can be intimidating, especially if your garden beds have been left...
What Not To Compost
Composting has many excellent benefits. It allows you to recycle organic material which can then be used to help to enhance your soil. And of course, it’s an environmentally friendly way to reduce trash. But before you get started you’ll need to know what not to...
How To Build A Vegetable Garden That Is Both Tasty And Attractive
A healthy vegetable garden can provide you with hours of stress-busting, mental health-boosting fun and give you and your family healthy, organic produce to eat for months. If you have even a few square feet of yard space, planting a vegetable garden is easy and...
Using Eggs Shells In The Compost
There are many food scraps that people use in their compost. However, there is one that is often overlooked. Using egg shells in compost is not just a great way to help reduce waste but also boosts the nutrient content of the soil you are creating for your plants....
Using Egg Shells In The Garden
Once you learn how you can use egg shells in the garden you won’t just think about eggs solely as food. Their shells are a free way to add to the health of your soil and plants, but they also have quite a few other helpful benefits as well. Here are the best ways to...
Using Orange Peels In The Garden
Oranges are a healthy snack and ingredient but you’re most likely wasting one of the most beneficial parts, the peel. While we can’t eat them, using orange peels in the garden has many surprising advantages. Here are the top ways you can put your peels to work....
Can You Compost Orange Peels?
If you’ve ever wondered, "can you compost orange peels?" the answer is yes. Although there are a few things you should know when doing so. So here’s your fast guide! Composting Basics When composting, you’ll need to include a mix of both carbon and nitrogen-rich...
Using Urine As Fertilizer
While urine is waste, it also contains nutrients that our bodies can’t use. But your garden can! Using urine as fertilizer is free and as organic as it gets! Here’s what you’ll need to know when thinking about using it. There have actually been multiple studies that...
The Urine-Compost Connection
Composting is all about re-using organic materials. And like the majority of us, you probably have been flushing away one of the most natural ways of all to condition your compost. By adding urine compost can be given a huge boost and that is passed on to whatever...
Using Banana Peels In Compost
Can you put banana peels in compost? You bet you can! While bananas offer us some extremely important nutritional benefits that help us to stay healthy, their peels can be used to add to the health of your compost pile as well. Bananas are one of the most popular...
Using Banana Peels In The Garden
Bananas are both delicious and healthy. And you may have wondered after finishing your morning shake or afternoon snack whether those peels you’ve been throwing away for years could be used for other things. What can you do with banana peels? It turns out quite a lot,...
Common Gardening Injuries And How to Avoid Them
While gardening isn’t necessarily the most dangerous pastime one can think of, injuries do occur. Recent data suggests that in the US alone, over 300,000 gardening injuries occur annually. So whether you are a seasoned gardener or are just beginning, it’s important to...
Just Moved? How To Safely Transport Your Plants Into Your New Garden
It can take years of planting and care to create a magnificent garden. That’s why the prospect of relocating or moving houses can induce anxiety in gardeners. Whether you plant ornamentals, or if you grow your own vegetables, having to start over can be a daunting...
Filling Those Window Boxes: Flower Species That Thrive With Container Gardening
Those traditional window boxes overflowing with flowers may remind you of summer cottages or childhood dreams. This particular feature is one that you want at your home all year-round. Container gardening for window boxes takes a certain flair for picking out the...
Why You’ll Want To Revamp Your Garden with Artificial Grass
Installing an artificial lawn is an easy and attractive way to improve and revamp your garden. This is because an artificial lawn is like a real lawn, only much better! Artificial grass has been developed to such a high-quality standard that it looks and feels as...
The Best Grass Types For Creating A Drought Tolerant Lawn
Many of us live in dry and arid places. There are many locations around the world that unfortunately for your lawn don’t get much rain throughout the year. For people who live in these places, a green, healthy-looking lawn can seem impossible to have and maintain....
Garden Drainage: How to Avoid a Waterlogged Garden & Patio
Many locations around the world get a lot of rain. With an average of 33 inches of rain per year, this is especially true in the U.K. where it is rare for a day to pass that it is not raining somewhere. Regardless of where you live this can lead to problems with...
Easy Lawn Care? Experts Say It’s Possible With These Tips!
There's no way around it: If you want a lush lawn, you have to work for it. That entails putting in a lot of time, effort, and yes, money. And even if you are hiring experts in lawn care, you will still need to shoulder some of the responsibilities involved. That does...
Water-Wise Landscaping: Avoid Cultivating These Types Of Plants
Water is one of the primary needs of all plants. They need to receive the right amount of hydration to grow and thrive properly. You can ensure your plants get the hydration they need by watering them regularly using a garden hose or watering can, or by having a...
Starting A Vegetable Garden: Motivational Tips For Beginners
Back in the day, our ancestors did not have to go very far to buy vegetables, they just had to step out in their garden and pick up free, fresh veggies. Unfortunately, over generations, most of us have lost touch with our natural gardening instincts due to the busy...