10 Useful Hacks How To Use Baking Soda In Your Garden


 Baking soda or the ‘wonder snow-white powder’ has a variety of uses in households. It battles powdery mildew on roses in the yard or patio, it helps get the strong smell of onion and garlic off your hands, it disinfects all the surfaces it comes into touch…

Go on to learn about the ways you can use the baking soda in the garden and kitchen.

Here are 10 useful hacks on how to use baking soda in your garden:

1.Baking soda ‘sweetens’ tomatoes

Your tomato fruits will have a sweater taste, will lower their acidity, and will easily “shake off” pests if you lightly sprinkle the soil they are planted in with some good quality baking soda powder.

2. Baking soda enhances magnificent blossoms in flowers

If you have flowers that thrive in alkaline soil, then with the baking soda you’ll get them to bloom magnificently! Begonias, geraniums and hydrangeas get a great benefit from being watered with a slight amount of baking soda, dissolved in the water.

3. Baking soda helps tender roses to battle powdery mildew

To keep roses looking fresh and healthy, and to stave off powdery mildew, spray them with this plant remedy as per need:

Baking Soda Plant Remedy:

7 tablespoons of baking soda

a small dash of insecticidal soap (no pyrethrums)

5 gallons of purified water

Note: Be sure to check often for signs of burning. If no burning occurs (some plants are very sensitive!), the spray can be safely used once a week.

4. Baking soda expels slugs

Do you need advice how to effectively get rid of backyard slugs? This is it: skip the expensive and hazardous chemicals! Instead, lightly pour baking soda on them!

5. Baking soda is a safe organic pesticide

You can make a safe and nonchemical pesticide spray that can kill harmful-to-plants insects, like aphids, while not harming beneficial insects, in this way:

Baking Soda Anti-insect Spray

1 teaspoon of baking soda

1/3 cup of any cold-pressed cooking oil

Note: Measure out 2 teaspoons of the mix and add it to 1 cup of water. Add this water to your plant sprayer.

6. Baking soda deodorizes smelly compost

To keep the smell of a compost area down, use baking soda right out of the box on the compost pile. This also helps prevent acidity from building up.

7. Baking soda sweeps cleans bird baths and clay pots

You can use the white powder as an effective tool for cleaning a bird bath without toxic chemicals. After you have put baking soda on it, use a damp cloth to get rid of filth, and then rinse well with water.

You can also use the baking soda to clean clay flower pots thoroughly and then you rinse them clean. In this way, no harmful residue of the baking soda will be absorbed inside the clay.

8. Baking soda keeps soil fresher in pots

When using clay pots, you can keep soil fresher by first coating the pot with a thin layer of baking soda, and then adding the planting soil.

9. Baking soda extends the life of cut flowers

If you have cut flowers and you want to extend their life, do not use commercial packaging solutions. Rather, just descend the flowers into a mild mixture of baking soda and water.

10. Baking soda battles the annoying ants

Eliminate pesky ants at the source by adding baking soda to the ant ‘hill’ when it is damp. A half an hour later, add a small amount of vinegar they will ingest on the way out, and eventually die from.