Decomposed granite in bonsai soils

James H

Mame
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Location
Gilbert Arizona
USDA Zone
9b
What is everyone thoughts on using decomposed granite in their bonsai soil mix? I live in an area where it is readily available and find trees growing in it naturally. I was thinking of using it as part of my soil mix and it would be sifted down for set sizes.
 
It it fine as an additive

Adds some weight to the mix, drains well but holds a little water.. Comes in sizes suitable for bonsai. Pretty good stuff. It is too heavy to use as a major part of the mix on a large tree though I think.. Would make a heavy tree unmanageable very fast.
 
Sounds good(for some reason) when it's called decomposed granite.

7 on the Mohs.

It's really just rocks!
(not to be confused with, IT really just rocks)

Sorce
 
Since it is so plentiful I would probably use it as part of my soil mix----
in my GROWING OUT BED. However, for all the reasons pointed
out above, your potted work would be a shift over to another mix. It
may save yourself the herniated discs you would produce using it for
much more than a medium small bonsai.
 
We have a source of it from Canada. Just a mix of 5 mm average particle size, since it is crushed, and compost [ less than 1/3 by volume ] grows anything well. Please note we have 6 months on average of no rain, and 6 months at around 6 " of rain.
Max high in summer / for the year - under 93 deg.F

Good Day
Anthony
 
and what about fired clay bricks bashed with a sledge hammer?
 
and what about fired clay bricks bashed with a sledge hammer?

Will still need to sieve it for size but I don't see why not.
High fired clay is high fired clay regardless of its source.
Crushed brick has been used in alpine/scree gardens for
quite some time.
 
Max,

if there is a brick factory near you, they will have a room for crushed red brick. Across here we get permission from the folk at the factory to sift, and so many buckets later, a year or two's supply.
One of our soil ingredients since 1980 or so.

The heaps outside an older factory, had mimosa pudica growing all over them.

Good Day
Anthony
 
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