Larry Caldwell
Elite Member
The Co-Op soil test kits are good for soil pH, but not much else. They are cheap and won't break the bank testing your garden soil. For commercial operations, stick with careful soil sample collection and a testing lab.
How big of a sample do you need to send in? I can't imagine you'd need anything near to what it would take to fill a litter box. Sounds like a fish story to me.I took a course a few years ago and they suggested collecting the soil in fall, then allowing it to dry to save on postage. Then told about a sample they'd received a few years earlier which had nitrogen way off the scale.
Upon investigating they discovered the client had collected the sample the previous year and stored it behind the woodstove. Apparently the family cat had used it for a litter box.
I find that hard to believe yet they claimed it as truth. At the very least it made a good story.
Do you recall the name of the company you used?The test kits here only measure the Ph, the outfits that spread whatever is needed do soil sampling which tells you what you need to balance the Ph and also what trace elements are needed, we did ours, cost $165 and got back an eight page comprehensive report, we are waiting for the rain to stop so we can put in 25 tons of lime then the trace elements, goodbye about $3000 but should be good for the next 5 years and give us some decent grass.
Nothing has been touched here for about 20 years.