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Simple gardening hack can give your lawn and flowers a spring spruce up – and it won’t cost you a penny

Published on April 11, 2025 at 09:12 AM

GARDENING experts have revealed the DIY trick you can use to fertilise your plants.

Give your and lawn a spring spruce up without spending any extra .

Hands planting basil in a community garden.
A kitchen staple could be the key to nourishing your flowerbeds and lawn this spring (stock image)

Instead of investing in bags of pricey fertiliser, simply repurpose an item that's already in your fridge.

According to the experts at Grow Veg, adding a popular kitchen staple to your soil can help to nourish your plants.

They encouraged green-fingered enthusiasts not to “throw out ingredients that are past their best [before date].”

Instead, they explained that some items can be used in the garden to “boost growth”.

The pros gave the example of using “milk that’s on the turn as a natural fertilser”.

Simply mix in your leftover milk with the soil around your plants and across your lawn.

Make sure to dilute your milk before you apply it to your garden so it goes even further.

A strong source of nutrients, milk can serve as a low-dose, organic fertiliser for plants.

It provides calcium and B vitamins, potentially aiding in plant growth and preventing blossom-end rot, and even acting as a natural fungicide.

Milk also makes an excellentpreventative sprayagainst powdery mildew.

Simply dilute it one part to 10 parts water and apply over the surface of your plant leaves.

Flourcan also be used as a natural fertiliser for your flowerbeds and lawn.

It contains nitrogen as well as micronutrients such as calcium, making it an ideal soil enrichment for leafy crops.

Just lightly dust stale flour over your soil a few weeks before planting, or add it in thin layers to your compost heap.

And don’t forget that almost all uncooked, plant-based kitchen scraps can be composted.

They are high in nutrients so don’t let them go to waste, recycle them back onto your garden.

Gardening experts Huw Richards and Sam Cooper have used to elevate their own flowerbeds.

One of their hacks involves using leftover coffee grounds to nourish their soil.

And be careful not to make a common in your garden this spring.

There's also an interesting reason why you should rethink pulling up your weeds.

Gardener's hands inspecting soil.
Adding milk to your soil can help to fertilise it by adding nutrients such as calcium and B vitamins (stock image)
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