The outer husk of a coconut (also known as coconut fiber/ neem coir) is super useful and beneficial. It improves both water and air management.
The characteristic of a healthy and good soil is that it quickly drains excess water while being able to retain enough water for dry periods. Additionally, excellent soil aeration is essential. The perfect soil aeration is created by the resilient structure of coconut fibers. Moreover, the organic content of the soil increases because coconut fiber is completely organic.
Of course, you can say I buy coconuts in the store and remove the fibers to use. But then you skip an important step... straight from nature, coconut fiber is not usable due to the very high salt content. This salt must be expertly removed. In most coconut fiber blocks, this has been done properly. However, be mindful when purchasing your coconut fibers.
Of course, you can use various substrates to germinate your palm seeds or other tropical seeds. Think of pumice granules, perlite granules mixed with potting soil, or sphagnum (which is a type of clean moss).
You can also use these substrates well to further grow your seedlings and plants. As long as you consider good drainage, a good pH balance, and enough nutrients for your plant as it grows larger. It is often also a matter of testing. Certain palm seeds and bulbs do well in sphagnum, and dragon blood tree seeds germinate very well in a mixture of coconut fibers with perlite and/or pumice granules.
This bottle palm seed I germinated in sphagnum and captured it in a time-lapse video.
If you order some seeds in the shop, you will also receive a free growing instruction that explains step by step how to best germinate certain seeds.
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