All About Coconut Coir – What It Is, Varieties, and How to Use It
The growing medium meets soil additive, coconut coir (or coco coir for short), is a favorite among green thumbs for good reason. Coconut coir retains water and breaks up soil just like peat moss. But unlike peat moss, coconut coir is a renewable byproduct, has a more balanced pH, and doesn’t break down as quickly. If you’re looking to improve your gardening game, learn how to use the many forms of coconut coir in your soil, planters, hydroponic systems, and more.
Where to Use Coconut Coir
To start, you should know that coco coir comes from the outer shell or husk of coconuts. Coir is available in many different textures and forms, each of which serves its own special purpose for gardening. To learn more about where and when you should use coco coir, keep reading.
Hanging planters and baskets
Hanging baskets and window box planters love coconut coir fiber. Plants do not grow directly in the coir fiber. Instead, it lines the basket or planter, creating a breathable, attractive, and natural pot that’s much lighter than ceramic options. The coir fiber holds the potting medium in place, while retaining water and slowly releasing it to the plants. Coconut coir as a basket liner also makes it easier for plants to receive oxygen thanks to its porous nature. Here’s how to use coir fiber in your hanging baskets and planters:
1-Start by lining the basket or planter with coir fiber, then add your growing medium — this should be a 50/50 mix of rehydrated coir and perlite.
2-Next, add your desired plants, keeping their roots below the surface of the soil.
3-Water your planter and watch your plants grow. Because coir fiber is naturally very porous, it allows more water to escape. This means your soil may dry out more quickly than a traditional pot, so just check your soil regularly.
Hydroponic systems
Coco coir has many qualities that make it fantastic for hydroponics. It’s slow to decompose, retains water well, is pH neutral, and helps transfer nutrients to the plant’s root system, as well as being anti-fungal. That’s a recipe for happy and healthy indoor plants.
To use coconut coir for in your hydroponic system:
Hydrate and wash the coir to remove any salt that might have been left over from its commercial processing. Keep rinsing until all of the tannins — the chemicals that make the water look like iced tea — are washed out.
Mix the coir with an equal amount of clay stones to create your growing medium.
Depending on what you’re growing in your hydroponic system, it’s important to add nutrients to the plants about once a month. Coir has plenty of potassium and phosphorus, but lacks other essential nutrients like calcium, chlorine, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, and nitrogen. Do your research to make sure your nutrient mix works well with the coco coir. You can also enrich your growing medium by adding microorganisms and worm castings.
Vegetable gardens and flower beds
Coco coir improves the soil for both flower and vegetable gardens. For a less expensive option than ready-to-use coir mix, try purchasing and preparing a coco coir brick.
To prepare a coir brick:
1-Place the brick in a large plastic tub or wheelbarrow. Leave room for it to expand once water is added. Coir bricks can grow up to 15 times the size of their original form.
2-Add six parts water to one part coir brick and let it sit for 10 minutes.
3-Continue adding water, about a cup at a time, until the coir is broken up. It feel moist and soil-like.
4-Break up any chunks with your hands or a shovel.
5-Add nutrients that are appropriate for the plants that you’ll be using.
6-Spade the prepared coir into your soil to a depth of one to two feet.
7-Store whatever coir you have left over properly (more on that to come).
Seed starting
When starting seeds, soil discs made from coconut coir pellets are oftentimes a must. These discs are small, compressed tablets about two inches in diameter. They sit flat, pack well into trays, and quickly expand when wet. Coco coir discs are an excellent home for seedlings because they leave room for root expansion and have a biodegradable composition, which makes transplanting a breeze. To use coconut coir discs with your seedlings:
1-Place the seed inside of the center of the disc, then set the disc in a shallow pan.
2-Slowly add water, and the disc will rapidly absorb the water and begin to swell.
3-Continue adding water to the pan as needed, and soon, the seed will sprout and start to grow.
4-Once the seedlings are large enough, prepare the soil where you will be planting them. Dig a hole slightly larger than the swelled discs, and place the seedling in the ground. If your coco coir discs have netting, you will want to snip them off to ensure the roots can escape.
As the seedlings’ roots spread, the coir disc retains moisture and improves the plants’ ability to adapt to life in the garden by keeping it hydrated consistently.
Great tips regrading Coco Coir . You provided the best information which helps us a lot. Thanks for sharing the wonderful information.
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