Used Tea Bags In The Garden

Many people don’t realize that once you’ve had a cup of tea, your tea bag can be used again in quite a few other ways. There are actually many great uses for used tea bags in the garden. And here are some of the best!

Free Natural Fertilizer 

The tea leaves and grounds found in your tea bags can be used as fertilizer in your garden or for potted plants indoors and out. By cutting open the bags and mixing the contents into the top layer of the soil you’ll be enhancing it with beneficial nutrients and organic matter.

Tea contains nitrogen along with potassium and phosphorous all of which are used in store-bought fertilizers to promote healthy plant growth along with other trace minerals as well. You can also place your used tea bags directly into the bottom drainage layer of potted plants. Just make sure they are biodegradable and made from paper.

Another option is to use brew a batch of weak tea using your old tea bags and once it cools use it to water your plants. You’ll want to keep in mind that when using tea as fertilizer, that it can slightly lower the pH making the soil more acidic. So if you’re plants are those that like alkaline soil you’ll want to use it only occasionally or place your tea bags in your compost instead.

Used Tea Bags In The Garden

 

 

Pest Control

Many gardeners use their used tea bags in the garden to help deter backyard pests. That’s because many pests hate the scent of tea. By sprinkling it on the soil it can help to keep them away.

Mice, along with many types of insects, and spiders, can be repelled by peppermint tea in particular. The scent of lavender tea scent is one that many insects hate as well. Black tea also has a strong scent that is often used around the base of plants to protect them from pests.

Keep Acid Loving Plants Happy 

Because they contain tannins most teas are mildly acidic. By mixing the contents of your used tea bags in the garden soil or the soil of your potted plants you can help to make it a bit more acidic for acid-loving plants. What plants like tea leaves? Well azaleas, daffodils, magnolias, camellias, and marigolds to name a few.

Blue hydrangeas also require acidic soil, and you can even change your pink hydrangea flowers to blue by giving your soil an acid boost. Of course, the tea will also make your soil more fertile as well.

Used Tea Bags In The Garden

 

 

Improve Rose Blooms

Adding the grounds or leaves from your used tea bags in the garden to the soil surrounding your rose bushes can help you to get the beautiful blooms you’ve been after. Unlike other acid-loving plants, roses like soil which is only slightly acidic. Soil with a pH of 7 is considered neutral and roses do best with a pH level anywhere between 6 and 6.9.

In fact, about 6.5 is considered ideal. Because tea is only mildly acidic it’s a perfect solution for helping to get your soil to the right acidity without going overboard. Using a tool such as a soil pH meter will let you know just how acidic or alkaline your soil is before you start. And help you to make accurate adjustments to get just the right balance.

Supplement Your Compost

Putting those used tea bags in the compost can really help to enhance its quality. The tea bags and the leaves inside provide organic matter which will be broken down and eaten by worms and other helpful micro-organisms. And don’t forget the added nutrients and minerals.

Tea bags also stay wet for a long time which in turn helps to keep the surrounding compost moist and encourages helpful decomposing bacteria. While an individual tea bag may seem small it can really add to your compost over time. If you drink a cup of tea per day or have a family with multiple tea drinkers, this can add up to many pounds of tea bags over the course of a year.

You will want to make sure however that you are using tea bags that are biodegradable. Many tea bags contain plastics such as polypropylene which will not break down. If your tea bags do contain plastic you can simply cut them open and pour the tea into your compost and throw the bags away.

Nowadays many tea drinkers actually purchase their own biodegradable tea bags and fill them up with their favorite tea. This not only means they can compost them but also helps the environment by cutting down on plastic waste that would otherwise take up space in landfills.

 

Start Shopping for Composting Supplies!

 

4 Steps to Get Your Garden Ready for Spring

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

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...

Using Urine As Fertilizer

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

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 The Garden

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,...

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This