21/05/2026
Some of my earliest memories, from when I was a little girl, were of visiting Nanna and Grandpop’s house in winter.
Nanna had one of those old wood stoves in the kitchen, and the little front fire door was almost always cracked open with that soft orange glow flickering away inside. There’d be a pile of chopped wood stacked beside it on the floor, a few weeks’ worth of old newspapers saved for relighting, and an ash bucket half full, ready to go out to the garden. The kitchen was always warm, cozy, and smelled faintly of smoke, rabbit stew, and comfort.
Nanna and Pop didn’t live a fancy life, but it was rich with love, laughter, and resourcefulness.
Nanna always sprinkled the wood ash somewhere throughout the veggie patch or around the garden, and because Nanna did it… Mum eventually did too.
For generations, gardeners have used woodfire ash in the garden as a kind of free homemade fertiliser. Grandparents swore by it. Old orchard growers scattered it beneath fruit trees. Veggie gardeners sprinkled it around the tomatoes and roses.
But does wood ash actually help the garden… or is it just another one of those old gardening myths that’s been passed down over time?
As it turns out — the answer is a bit of both.
So, Can We Use Wood Ash in the Garden?
Yes… if used correctly.
Wood ash can genuinely benefit some soils and plants because it contains valuable minerals absorbed by the tree while it was still alive and growing. Once the wood burns down, a lot of those minerals remain concentrated in the ash.
Wood ash commonly contains: calcium, potassium, magnesium, phosphorus and trace minerals
One thing wood ash doesn’t really contain, though, is nitrogen. During combustion, nitrogen is largely burnt off and released back into the atmosphere as the wood burns away.
So, while wood ash can help improve soil mineral levels, it’s not really a “complete fertiliser” the way many people assume.
Think of it more as a mineral supplement, soil amendment, and natural pH adjuster rather than a magic cure-all for the garden.
An Interesting Fact Most Gardeners Don’t Realise About Wood Ash
is that it's surprisingly alkaline and can often have a pH upwards of 9–11.
So, if you were tipping your ash bucket out in the same area of the garden week after week, you could unintentionally raise your soil pH over time.
For gardeners with naturally acidic soils, that's fine... it might actually be beneficial.
But for many of us gardening in naturally alkaline regions — like parts of the Limestone Coast, South Australia, too much wood ash can quietly create problems we don’t immediately notice.
Problems like nutrient lock up, reduced soil biology and create a hard crusty soil surface.
Despite the myths, there actually was good logic behind many of the old gardening practices involving wood ash. Wood ash is naturally rich in potassium — an important nutrient that helps support flowering, fruiting, disease resilience, and water regulation within our plants. That’s why older gardeners often sprinkled it around things like tomatoes, roses, pumpkins, garlic, onions and fruit trees.
And interestingly, not all ashes are created equal either. Hardwood ashes like red gum or old fruit tree pruning's, generally contain far more minerals and nutritional value than softwoods like pine.
So, Grandpa wasn’t completely wrong after all. 😉
Can You Put Wood Ash in Compost?
Yes... but sparingly.
A light sprinkling of wood ash through the compost can actually help add valuable minerals, reduce odours, and balance an overly acidic compost.
Thick layers are another story.
Too much ash in compost can raise pH too high, slow microbial activity and interfere with decomposition.
As with most things, balance matters.
A sprinkle is beneficial.
A bucket dumped in one spot… umm, probably not.
Does Wood Ash Stop Slugs and Snails?
This one sits somewhere between fact and myth.
Dry ash can temporarily irritate soft-bodied pests like slugs and snails.
The problem is, the moment dew, rain, or moisture hits the ash… it quickly loses effectiveness.
So, while it might help briefly, it’s not really a reliable long-term snail control method.
(And honestly, a nighttime wander through the garden with a torch and a bucket still works surprisingly well!)
Warning ⚠️
Not all ash is safe to use in the garden.
Avoid using ash from treated timber, painted wood, MDF, laminated products, or those BBQ charcoal briquettes.
These materials can contain glues, chemicals, salts, or heavy metals that you definitely don’t want ending up in your soil.
Only use ash from clean, untreated natural wood.
The Real Secret to Using Wood Ash Successfully
The best gardeners rarely rely on just one thing alone, they tend to use a balanced, layered approach instead. A little bit of this, a little bit of that, all working together. Wood ash works best when used sparingly alongside compost, mulch, healthy soil biology, organic matter and good watering practices, because ultimately, healthy soil is all about balance.
A quick fun historical fact — Did You Know...
Long before commercial fertilisers existed, wood ash was actually one of the world’s most important agricultural products.
The word “potash” literally comes from the term “pot ashes”, because people once soaked wood ash in large pots of water to extract potassium salts for farming, soap making and food production.
It became such an important source of potassium that potash eventually grew into a major international trade commodity.
Not bad for something most of us simply sweep out of the fireplace and throw away.”
Gardening has always been full of old traditions handed down through generations.
Some turn out to be myths, some turn out to contain real wisdom.
And many sit somewhere beautifully in between.
Wood ash in the garden is a perfect example of that.
Turns out many of those old gardening traditions carried more wisdom than people realised.
Happy Gardening😘💚
https://www.tjsgardeningworks.space/post/wood-ash-in-the-garden-helpful-soil-booster-or-old-gardening-myth