edit: Don’t do this. Embrace modernity and don’t pollute the soil.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Shit like this is why people doing home gardening, especially in areas that have been inhabited for hundreds of years, without testing the soil first give me heart palpitations. What are you eating?? I don’t know, and neither do you!

    • @[email protected]
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      281 year ago

      My neighborhood soil is laced with arsenic and lead from an old foundry that used to be nearby.

      A bunch of my neighbors grow and eat food in that soil knowing it. It boggles my mind.

        • @[email protected]
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          201 year ago

          Yea, and the response has been ‘I’ve been eating food I’ve grown here for 20 years and I’m totally fine!’

          • @[email protected]
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            131 year ago

            Just like the people that love to tell their grandparents lived a long life smoking tobacco everyday.

            • @Beaphe
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              51 year ago

              It wasn’t the smoking that didnt kill em. It was the minding their own fucking business.

    • @Aux
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      41 year ago

      People doing home gardening usually replace the soil.

      • @[email protected]
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        71 year ago

        Almost everyone I know of that gardens at home just tills the soil they have available. Gardening soil isn’t cheap and they view it as an unnecessary expense. It’s especially hard to convince people in rural areas that just using the dirt out back can be harmful.

        • @Aux
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          01 year ago

          When I lived in a private house with a garden, we would buy new soil EVERY YEAR. Because fuck all grows otherwise.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            I grew up in the country and my grandparents never bought any soil, but God knows what they added to it. Arsenic used to be common in pesticides, for example.

    • Casey
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      21 year ago

      I know you can send soil to be tested by your local university extension, but how do you test for conaminents like used hydrocarbons, arsenic, lead, glyphosate-based herbicides, etc?

      I am about to embark on a hobby of composting and would like to know.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        If your local university doesn’t test for the specific contaminants you’re concerned about you can send samples to a private lab instead, sometimes they offer more testing options. I don’t know the specifics of how each one is tested for, but on your end they usually just require you to take (and possibly dry) soil samples before sending them in.

        If you don’t have a good idea of the history of the site, it would be good to try and figure it out through your local historical society if you have one, or land records from your local records office. Whoever is testing the soil will have a better idea of what to test for if they know it used to be a mining town, or it’s 50 feet from a house old enough to have used lead paint, if it was farm land, etc.