Sources of Soil Contamination

Safe vs Unsafe Pots

What you grow your veggies in is just as important as the soil you use. Summer garden conditions—like heat, UV rays, and slightly acidic soil—can actually cause certain planters to leach unwanted compounds right into your food’s root zone!

Here’s a quick guide to keeping your container garden safe and healthy. Containers to Skip for Food Crops:

Old Tires: They might seem like a clever upcycling hack, but rubber can leach heavy metals like zinc and cadmium, along with petroleum-based compounds, especially when baking in the summer sun.

Pre-2004 Treated Lumber: Older treated wood was often preserved with CCA (chromated copper arsenate). While modern post-2004 treated lumber uses safer chemistry, untreated naturally rot-resistant wood remains the ultimate worry-free choice.

Mystery Glazed Pottery: Older pieces or uncertified imported ceramics can sometimes hide lead in their beautiful glazes. Keep these for your ornamental houseplants and flowers!

Galvanized Steel: These rustic buckets look great, but they can leach excess zinc into highly acidic soils. While plants need a little zinc, too much can stunt your veggies.

Styrofoam & PVC: Constant sunlight and high temperatures cause these materials to degrade and become brittle over time, shedding microplastics and other chemical compounds into your soil.

Safe Bets for a Healthy Harvest:

Food-Grade Plastics: Flip that container over and look for recycling codes #2 (HDPE) or #5 (PP). These stable plastics are exactly what’s used for food storage and are completely safe for growing edibles!

Untreated Cedar: The gold standard for wooden raised beds. It’s naturally rot-resistant, beautifully rustic, and 100% chemical-free.

Unglazed Terracotta: Classic for a reason! It’s simply baked earth—free of additives, highly breathable, and perfectly safe for your food crops.

Fabric Grow Bags: A veggie gardener’s best friend! They’re food-safe, drain beautifully, and naturally “air-prune” your plants’ roots to keep them from circling. They are hands-down one of the best choices for growing robust tomatoes and peppers!

What are your favorite containers for growing veggies? Let us know below!

Indicators of Dead Soil

Indicators of Dead Soil

Your soil is telling you what’s wrong. Most gardeners don’t know how to read it.

Water that sheets off instead of soaking in. A white crust after the bed dries. No worms when you flip a shovelful. Pale grey color instead of dark brown. A sour smell when you turn it. Standing water hours after rain.

Each one points to a specific cause. And almost all of them point to the same fix.

What you’re seeing and what it means:

– Water running off — the surface has crusted from compaction or lost its sponge-like structure. Fungal networks that hold soil particles together are gone. Stop tilling and mulch over a layer of compost. The structure rebuilds in one season

– White crust — salt residue from synthetic fertilizer building up faster than soil biology can process it. Switch to compost-based feeding and deep water once to flush the surface layer

– No worms in a full shovelful — the food web has nothing to eat. No organic matter, no decomposing mulch, no root activity. Add compost and mulch. Worms migrate in once there’s food

– Pale grey color — organic matter is depleted. Years of harvesting without returning material. Two inches of compost each fall and a cover crop in the off-season bring the color back within a couple of years

– Sour smell when turned — the soil went airless. Compaction or poor drainage trapped water and pushed out oxygen. A broadfork opens air channels without flipping the soil. Coarse organic matter keeps them open

– Standing water hours after rain — no pore space for drainage. Add compost to create channels, or build a raised bed on top and let the soil underneath improve over time

The pattern: five of these six are fixed the same way. Stop tilling. Add compost. Mulch. Wait a season.

The soil isn’t broken. It’s hungry. Feed it and the biology comes back on its own.

The Effect of Composting

The Effect of Composting

One inch of compost spread on top of dead soil triggers a 30-day biological cascade that no fertilizer bag can replicate — because fertilizer feeds plants while compost feeds the organisms that build the system plants depend on.

Day 1, nothing visible changes.

Day 7, earthworms from the subsoil detect the organic matter and begin migrating upward.

Day 14, fungal threads from the compost layer extend downward into the dead soil, creating the first nutrient transport channels.

Day 21, bacterial populations have doubled and the soil beneath the compost is measurably darker, softer, and holds water longer.

Day 30, the dead soil and the compost layer are no longer distinguishable. They merged.

You didn’t fix the soil. You restarted its biology.

Vegetable Companion Planting

Vegetable Companion Planting

Want to get the absolute most out of your container garden this season? Smart plant pairings are the secret! I absolutely love combining crops because it saves precious space and maximizes the harvest from every single pot.

Check out these winning combinations:
Tomatoes + Basil: A legendary duo! They thrive in the same growing conditions and are just as perfect together in the dirt as they are on your plate.

Peppers + Marigolds: Not only does this combo add a gorgeous pop of color to your patio, but marigolds also naturally help protect your peppers from pests!

Lettuce + Radishes: The ultimate pair for a quick, crunchy, and satisfying harvest.

Pro Tip: The golden rule of container gardening is to always group plants that crave the exact same amount of sunshine and water. It makes caring for your patio garden an absolute breeze!

Cardboard Weed Suppression

Cardboard In The Garden

The stack of delivery boxes by the door is a weed-suppressing, moisture-retaining, fungi-feeding planting bed — buried under compost in twenty minutes, at zero cost.

Sheet mulching works by laying wet cardboard directly onto unprepared ground, overlapping edges by 15 cm to prevent gaps where weeds can push through. The cardboard blocks light to existing weeds, creates a substrate for decomposer fungi, and retains moisture in the soil beneath it. Earthworms do the rest — in three to six months, the cardboard is gone and replaced by dark, active humus.

To start a new bed today do the following steps, watering in each layer as you add it. The bed will be ready to plant the same day.

Remove all tape and plastic labels before laying: these are the only parts that do not break down cleanly.

Lay the cardboard in overlapping sheets on the area to be planted or slightly larger if space and cardboard permits.

Add a layer of branches and leaves.

Add a 5 cm layer of garden compost on top.

Add 10 cm of topsoil or growing medium.

Add a layer of fine mulch appropriate to the intended crop.

What grows well over sheet mulch from the first season:
Courgettes and cucumbers draw on the consistent moisture retained by the wet layer beneath. Tomatoes benefit from the stable soil temperature. Lettuce and salad leaves establish quickly in the upper compost layer without needing deep root runs. French beans penetrate the cardboard layer within weeks and drive roots straight through.

The Buried Olla – Your Irrigation Secret Weapon

The Buried Olla - Your Irrigation Secret Weapon

Tired of being a slave to the watering can all summer? Let me introduce you to the ultimate gardening game-changer: the olla!

An olla is simply an unglazed terracotta pot buried in your vegetable bed with just its neck peeking out. It’s an ancient, brilliant way to deliver water directly to the root zone. That means zero evaporation, no wasteful runoff, and no more daily watering chores!

The best part? The terracotta is completely self-regulating. Water seeps through the porous clay faster when the surrounding soil is dry, and naturally slows down when the soil is moist. Your plants get exactly what they need, exactly when they need it. A single 5-litre pot will hydrate a 50 cm circle, and just three pots spaced a metre apart can keep an entire raised bed perfectly watered for 4 to 5 days during the peak of summer.
You can set your own up in just 10 minutes:

Find your pot: Grab an unglazed terracotta pot (about 20–25 cm across). Make sure it’s unglazed, otherwise the pores will be blocked!

Seal the bottom: Plug the bottom drainage hole tightly using a wine cork and some food-safe silicone sealant.

Plant it: Bury the pot up to its neck, about 20 cm away from the stems of thirsty, deep-rooted plants like tomatoes, courgettes, or peppers.

Fill and cover: Fill the pot with water and pop a flat stone or terracotta saucer over the opening to stop evaporation and keep bugs out.

Within just a few weeks, your plants’ roots will literally grow toward the pot to embrace it! Even during dry spells when the topsoil looks bone dry, your olla will be silently working underground to keep the active root zone perfectly hydrated.

If finding the time to water is the only thing keeping you from growing the kitchen garden of your dreams, this is hands-down the most practical, low-cost trick out there. You can build one cheaply, and the system practically runs itself!

Cold Frame – A Fast Start To The Growing Season

Cold Frame - A Fast Start To The Growing Season

A cold frame is a bottomless box with a salvaged window on top. No electricity. No heater. About fifteen dollars in lumber and a window someone threw away.

The glass traps solar heat and raises the temperature inside enough to start crops six weeks before last frost and keep them going six weeks past first frost. Three extra months of food from a box you can build in an afternoon.

The whole thing is four boards screwed together with the back taller than the front so the glass slopes toward the sun. The window sits on top — hinged or just resting there. The box sits directly on soil. That’s the entire build.

What grows inside one:
– Lettuce — cut-and-come-again greens starting in early March
– Spinach — stays cool enough that it won’t bolt
– Radish — ready in under a month, sow a new row every two weeks
– Kale — frost actually sweetens the flavor
– Carrots — slow but protected from freezing soil

The one thing that kills seedlings in a cold frame isn’t cold — it’s heat. On sunny days the interior climbs fast. Prop the window open with a stick when it’s warm and close it at sunset.

Four boards, one window, twenty screws. Your cold climate neighbors are still waiting for late spring.

Trench Composting

Trench Composting
A trench filled with kitchen scraps and buried under soil becomes the richest planting row in your garden — and it costs nothing.
Trench composting skips the compost bin entirely. No turning. No waiting. No smell. You bury raw kitchen scraps directly in the ground, cover them with soil, and plant heavy-feeding crops on top within a few weeks.
🌱 How to build a trench row:
1. Dig a trench about twelve inches deep and as long as your garden row
2. Fill the bottom four to six inches with kitchen scraps — banana peels, coffee grounds, eggshells, vegetable trimmings, fruit cores
3. Cover with six to eight inches of soil so the scraps are fully buried with no exposed material. Done
4. Wait two to three weeks. Earthworms find the buried scraps and begin composting underground. The trench attracts significantly more worms than surrounding soil and they produce castings that deliver nutrients exactly where roots will need them
5. Plant directly into the soil above the trench. Any heavy feeder works — squash, tomatoes, corn, cucumbers, pumpkins, and melons all thrive above a buried trench because the decomposing layer provides slow-release fertility all season
One trench absorbs months of household kitchen waste and diverts it from the landfill into your soil.
By midsummer the trench layer is fully broken down into dark crumbly humus that holds moisture like a buried sponge. The plants above it grow noticeably bigger than the same varieties in untreated soil.
Rotate your trench to a new row each year. After three seasons every row in your garden has been deep-fed — and your fertilizer costs drop to nearly nothing

Natural Fertilizer

Natural Fertilizer

Most gardeners know about compost — but some of the best fertilizers are already in your kitchen, hiding in plain sight.
 Six household sources and what they feed:
– Wood ash — rich in potassium and calcium. A light dusting around the base feeds garlic, carrots, lavender, and clematis. Avoid using it near acid-loving plants like blueberries — it raises soil pH
– Epsom salt — magnesium sulfate that supports chlorophyll production. A tablespoon per gallon of water can help roses, tomatoes, peppers, and strawberries — especially in soils that tend to run low in magnesium
– Cooking water — the starchy mineral-rich water left from boiling pasta or vegetables is a gentle liquid feed. Let it cool completely, then pour it over basil, ferns, lettuce, or houseplants
– Seaweed — fresh or dried, it delivers trace minerals that most garden soils lack. Lay it around potatoes, corn, fruit trees, or dahlias as mulch, or steep it into a liquid tea for a concentrated feed
– Fish scraps — heads, bones, and skin break down into a nitrogen-rich feast. Bury them about twelve inches deep near heavy feeders like cabbage, sunflowers, squash, and sweet corn. Deep burial keeps animals from digging them up
– Spent mushroom compost — growing medium from mushroom farms is loaded with slow-release nutrients and improves soil structure. Spread it around asparagus, rhubarb, herbs, and perennial flower beds for steady feeding all season.
Every kitchen already produces plant food. It just takes knowing which source feeds which root.