How to Garden With Vinegar
How to Garden With Vinegar
Vinegar is a useful cleaning tool that you can use both inside and outside your home! In your garden, you can strategically use this substance to protect your plants from a variety of creatures, like dogs, cats, rabbits, slugs, and ants. Additionally, you can use vinegar to improve the soil and germination in your garden. Try including this helpful liquid in your gardening routine and see if you notice a difference!
Steps

Maintaining Your Garden

Add vinegar when watering plants to lower the pH of your soil. Combine 1 cup (240 mL) of white vinegar and 4 litres (17 c) of cool water together in a watering can or jug. Next, stir both ingredients together using a long utensil. Pour the mixture over your plant beds to lower the pH, which can help certain plants (e.g., azaleas, rhododendrons) to thrive. Check if your plants grow better in an acidic environment before watering them with vinegar solution. If the plants do better in an alkaline environment, then the mixture could do more harm than good.

Kill off any unwanted weeds with a few sprays of vinegar. Spray or pour vinegar directly onto the pesky, offending weeds that are plaguing your garden. If you want to use an all-natural weed killer before turning to a pesticide, try using pure white vinegar. Pour the liquid over the weeds until both the soil and plant are saturated with vinegar. Be careful whenever you use vinegar. The acid in vinegar can cause serious bodily harm when concentrated more than 11%. Use eye goggles and gloves to prevent any injury.

Soak seeds in a mixture of water and vinegar to speed up germination. Give your newly seeded plants a jumpstart by soaking them in a vinegar and water mixture before you plant them. Mix 500 millilitres (2.1 c) of water with 125 millilitres (0.53 c) of white vinegar in a bowl, and submerge the seeds in the mixture. Let the seeds soak overnight before planting them the next morning.

Clean your gardening tools with vinegar. Fill a large basin, tub, or bucket with undiluted white vinegar, depending on the size of your dirty garden tools. Submerge the items in the vinegar bath, letting them soak for at least 1 hour. Keep the tools in the mixture until they look dirt-free and clean. You can also use white vinegar to clean hummingbird baths and clay pots.

Deterring Animals and Pests

Spray vinegar to keep your outdoor pets away. If your pet likes to loiter around your plants, try spritzing the edges of your garden with white vinegar. Cover any surfaces near where your pet likes to prowl, as the smell will drive them away. Try and spray vinegar on a daily basis, or however often your pet goes through your garden. Citrus spray and lemon peels can also work for this. Vinegar is also a great hazing option for scaring away coyotes. Consider filling a water gun with white vinegar and using it to spray any coyotes that wander through your yard.

Spritz around the edge of your garden to get rid of ants. Keep an eye out for any trails of ants entering your garden. Once you’ve figured out their main entry points, use a spray bottle to spritz vinegar over these areas. Continue inspecting and spraying these areas on a daily basis to keep the ants away! If vinegar doesn’t seem to deter the ants, you might have to use a different method. Vinegar is also a natural deterrent for spiders and other bugs.

Create vinegar fruit fly traps for your trees. Fill an empty beer bottle or tin about halfway with apple cider vinegar. Try several of these containers to different tree branches, and see if the fruit flies begin to go away! You might need to hang up more than 1, depending on the size of the plant. These traps are especially effective with fruit trees and fruit-bearing plants.

Leave out vinegar-soaked corncobs to keep rabbits from coming in your garden. Take several old corncobs and place them in a bowl filled with at least 1 cup (240 mL) of white vinegar. Make sure that the corncobs are completely submerged, so they reek with the scent and taste of vinegar. Place these corncobs in spots where the rabbits tend to frequent to give these rodents a sour surprise! If you don’t have enough vinegar to completely submerge your corncobs, spin them around in the bowl so all surfaces are coated with vinegar. Use as many corncobs as you need. If you have a small garden, you might only need 1-3 corncobs, while a larger garden might require more.

Eliminate slugs with a squirt of vinegar. Get rid of slugs on sight by spraying them with a mixture of water and vinegar. Combine 1 cup (240 mL) of white vinegar with 0.5 cups (120 mL) in a spray bottle, and spritz the slugs with the solution. Once you’ve squirted the pests, dispose of them in waste bin. If you suspect that there are slugs in your garden, look for a telltale trail of slime.

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