Wood ash is good for your yard when used as part of an overall lawn care plan with soil testing, composting, fertilizing, aerating and monitoring. Wood ash raises soil pH and contains essential nutrients good for soil and necessary for healthy plants and lawns. Considered a low-grade fertilizer by most lawn care professionals, wood ash contains potassium, phosphorus, magnesium, aluminum and sodium along with other micronutrients, including calcium.
Test Your Soil
Testing to determine baseline soil chemistry is a good way to start before wood ash or other fertilizers are applied. Basic soil tests are widely available and easy to use, or call in the professionals for a more comprehensive analysis. Applying wood ash alone runs the risk of making your soil too alkaline, so a baseline soil test before you start is a good idea. Wood ash contains little or no nitrogen, and so applying wood ash to lawns is often done in concert with other fertilizer applications.
Add Wood Ash to Compost
Applying wood ash to lawns and gardens in the fall is an excellent way to raise soil pH and alter soil alkalinity, in the same way that lime or limestone lawn applications do. But adding wood ash alone to lawns can be tricky, producing lye and salts when wet, so consider adding your ash to compost first. Then spread the ash-compost in the usual way with an even distribution. Water lightly after application as this prevents losses and maximizes the benefits to your lawn. Don't combine wood ash with standard nitrogen-rich fertilizers or spread wood ash at the same time you are fertilizing. A mixture of wood ash and nitrogen fertilizers can produce ammonia gas.
Wood Ash Lawn Benefits
Healthy lawns prefer slightly acidic soils, but if pH is too low, poor plant growth and even mortality results. Wood ash lowers soil acidity and raises alkalinity or soil pH. Getting the right balance promotes year-round lush, green and luxurious lawn growth. Wood ash improves soil structure and strengthens plant cells. Typically, good results from wood ash applications on lawns are visible within a few weeks to a month after treatment.
You can test your wood ash to get a better handle on how it will affect your lawn and garden. Different kinds of wood produce different levels of nutrients when burned to ash; for example, hardwoods like maple and oak have higher nutrient concentrations than softwoods, such as pine, spruce and fir.