DirtDigginChick
Active Member
I was just about to post something that might help. Online I find the EDU sites the most reliable.
See if this info helps.
Here is a paste and link from umass.edu about soil testing. I figure if distilled water PH was crucial they would say test the PH of the distilled water.
umass.edu
Most greenhouse soil tests measure pH (acidity), soluble salts, and specific major and minor elements. A soil test is designed to extract plant available nutrients for analysis. This accomplished by using an extracting solution which mimics the root systems in terms extracting nutrients from the soil. Nowadays, for greenhouse soilless media, the most common extracting solution is distilled water and the standard test is the saturated media extract (SME) method. In this procedure a paste is formed by mixing the sample with distilled water and, following an equilibration period, the liquid portion is analyzed for its nutrient content. Two other methods are used by some labs - 1:2 dilution and 1:5 dilution. These involve mixing the sample with larger volumes of water then equilibrating, filtering and analyzing the extract. All three are accepted methods, but SME is used by most commercial and many state labs.
Here is the link:
https://ag.umass.edu/greenhouse-floriculture/fact-sheets/soil-tests-sampling-interpreting-results-of-greenhouse-soil-0
OooooOoo I like it when they give me dilution rates to play with! Thanks! I'll check it out before doing my side-by-side.