Coco Coir, gardening consumer hype?

Discussion in 'Seed Starting / Propagation' started by jbest123, Oct 25, 2013.

  1. jbest123

    jbest123 In Flower

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    I have read so much information on Coco Coir I thought I would try it. It is not available locally and the cheapest I could find it on the net was eBay. A10# block cost $12 plus $10 shipping. It was a little pricey but I figured part of the cost would go to education. I have not used any yet but my parliamentary thoughts now are a good bit of that $22 will go toward education. This photo is the 10# block in the recommended 4 gallon of water in a storage tote.
    [​IMG]
    P7030505 by tsebmj, on Flickr
    After 12 hrs of scratching the wet surface with a hand cultivator I had the 6” x 12” x 12” block broken into eqq size chunks. Some smaller and some larger.
    [​IMG]
    P7040508 by tsebmj, on Flickr
    The chunks sat in the water over night and the next morning with less than ¼” of water penetration in to the surface. After an additional hour, I had the chunks rubbed through ½”hardware cloth.
    [​IMG]
    P7040509 by tsebmj, on Flickr
    I ended up with less than two cubic feet of nice looking sphagnum moss substitute after $22 and 21 hours of time invested. I will not be buying any additional Coco Coir in the future.
    [​IMG]
    P7260007 by tsebmj, on Flickr
     
    Jewell and oubee like this.
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  3. Netty

    Netty Chaotic Gardener Plants Contributor

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    I will not use coco coir either. It dries out very quickly and doesn't seem to have much in the way of nutrients. I don't find it easy to work with either.
     
  4. eileen

    eileen Resident Taxonomist Staff Member Moderator Plants Contributor

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    I tried it once but never again. A complete waste of time and money.
     
  5. stratsmom

    stratsmom Flower Fanatic

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    I kind of like it to mix with potting soil :sete_012:
     



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  6. oubee

    oubee In Flower

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    Consider it not as money lost but wisdom gained!
     
  7. Jewell

    Jewell Incorrigible Gardener Plants Contributor

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    I've only seen it as the shredded product used in hanging baskets. The birds and squirrels love it for nest building. Never thought of it as a chopped planting medium. Is it used in place of or in combination with peat?
     
  8. jbest123

    jbest123 In Flower

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    The best I can say about it is it makes a good door mat.
     
  9. Sjoerd

    Sjoerd Mighty Oak

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    Nice and interesting posting, JB. You just have to try things sometimes, right.
    I liked the step-by-step foto's.
     
  10. Netty

    Netty Chaotic Gardener Plants Contributor

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    It is used to replace peat. I thought it was a great idea until I tried it. I'll stick with peat moss!
     
  11. carolyn

    carolyn Strong Ash

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    The one plus I will give it...it does rehydrate much quicker than peat, but I still like peat better than this stuff, nor is coir isn't any more cost effective than peat in our area.
     
  12. jbest123

    jbest123 In Flower

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    The only attribute I can think of is the Coir would alleviate the pressure on the moss beds.
     

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