Nov 25, 2025
This week on the podcast, Joanne
discusses soil testing with The Hobby Homestead's Amy Ellard-Gray,
who grows 75% of her family’s fruits and vegetables in her Guelph
backyard.
About
Amy
Amy runs The Hobby Homestead in
suburban Guelph, where she cultivates over 100 varieties of native
plants to support the local ecosystem. Through her YouTube channel, Instagram, website, and in-person
consultations, she helps people design and troubleshoot their own
food-growing spaces. Her mantra, “growing food in harmony with
nature,” guides everything she does, from tending soil life to
welcoming wildlife into the garden.
Topics discussed in this
episode:
“How much compost is too
much?”
- Amy
questioned the popular “just pile on compost” / no-dig approach
(e.g., growing directly in municipal compost).
- After
consulting an agronomist, she learned you can overdo compost,
especially because compost often has high soluble salts that can
stress plants.
- General
rule of thumb from the agronomist: for established beds, about ½
inch (1 cm) of compost as a top-dressing per year is usually
enough, but every garden is different.
Why test compost and
soil?
- Amy now
plans to lab-test her own compost (about $20) for salts and
nutrients before using it widely.
- Lab
tests are often similar in price to store-bought kits and usually
include a quick consult to interpret results.
- Soil
tests are especially valuable for:
- New
builds or new-to-you properties.
- High-value plants (e.g., Japanese maples, fruit
trees).
- Chronic
problem areas like failing lawns or veggie beds.
Home test kits vs lab
tests
- Simple
garden-center test kits can be unreliable, especially if old or
poorly stored.
- Nitrogen is hard to test accurately because it
changes quickly in the soil; even lab reports often base nitrogen
recommendations on plant symptoms, not just numbers.
- Labs
can tailor tests to what you’re growing (lawn, ornamentals,
vegetables, etc.).
pH: the quiet
troublemaker
- Amy’s
big lesson: pH controls nutrient availability.
- Low pH
can lock up phosphorus.
- High pH
(common in parts of Ontario) ties up iron, manganese, and
zinc.
- Just
adding fertilizer won’t help if pH is off and plants can’t actually
access those nutrients.
- Raising
pH with lime is relatively straightforward; lowering pH (for
blueberries/azaleas) is hard, requires repeated sulfur, and soil
tends to drift back—Amy has nearly given up on blueberries because
of this.
Choosing soil: bulk vs
bags, municipal compost
- Amy
strongly prefers high-quality bulk triple mix from a trusted
supplier (often with nutrient analysis available).
- She’s
wary of:
- Bagged
soil/compost of unknown origin, age, and quality.
- Municipal compost giveaways, due to uncertain
inputs (treated lawns, herbicides, diseased plants) and
inconsistent processing.
- Leftover bulk soil gets used in pots, extra
beds, or stored for future top-ups—she never feels like she has
“too much soil.”
Building and maintaining
soil in raised beds & pots
- Raised
beds: start with good triple mix, then top up yearly with a thin
layer of compost and mulch (leaves, straw,
chop-and-drop).
- Containers: use potting mix or triple mix plus
perlite for drainage; reuse soil but amend and top up rather than
dumping it every year.
- She
only uses extra fertilizer (like fish emulsion) when pushing
density in containers (e.g., many beets in a small
pot).
Rotation, disease, and
“messy” gardens
- Classic
crop rotation is more critical at farm scale; in small backyards,
many diseases are airborne, so simply shifting crops a few feet
often doesn’t prevent them.
- Rotation still matters for certain soil-borne
diseases (Amy rotated tomatoes after Alternaria collar rot), but
it’s not the magic solution some make it out to be.
- Leaving
more plant material, leaves, and roots in place supports soil life
and natural pest-predator balance, instead of resetting everything
with a “clean” fall garden.
Amy’s message for
gardeners
- Shift
your mindset from “feeding the plants” to “feeding the
soil.”
- Healthy, living soil is what ultimately feeds
healthy, productive plants.
Find The Hobby
Homestead at www.thehobbyhomestead.com and
on Instagram and YouTube.
Resources Mentioned in
the Show:
Down the Garden Path: A
Step-By-Step Guide to Your Ontario Garden
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gardening expert?
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Down the Garden Path
Podcast
On Down The Garden Path, professional
landscape designer Joanne Shaw discusses
down-to-earth tips and advice for your plants, gardens and
landscapes. As the owner of Down2Earth Landscape Design,
Joanne Shaw has been designing beautiful gardens for homeowners
east of Toronto for over a decade. She does her best to bring you
interesting, relevant and useful topics to help you keep your
garden as low-maintenance as possible.
In Down the Garden Path: A
Step-By-Step Guide to Your Ontario Garden, Joanne and
fellow landscape designer Matthew Dressing distill their
horticultural and design expertise and their combined experiences
in helping others create and maintain thriving gardens into one
easy-to-read monthly reference guide. Get your copy today on
Amazon.
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