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Dandy's Topsoil

Dandy's Spent Mushroom Compost | Traditional Soil Improver

Traditional well-rotted horse and chicken manure soil improver, perfect for no-dig gardens

£150.22£186.84

The classic British soil improver - well-rotted horse and chicken manure with straw, used by allotmenteers for decades. Perfect for no-dig gardens, vegetable plots and clay-soil improvement. By Dandy's.

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Key features

  • Well-rotted horse and chicken manure with straw - properly composted, easy to handle
  • Perfect for no-dig gardens - generous mulch incorporated by worms over the year
  • Slightly alkaline (pH 6.5-8.0) - excellent for vegetables, clay soils, brassicas, asparagus
  • Improves both clay and sandy soils - opens clay, holds moisture in sand
  • Rich in nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium
  • NOT for ericaceous plants (rhododendrons, camellias, blueberries, heathers)
Material Well-rotted horse and chicken manure with straw, composted via the mushroom-growing process
Weight Bulk bags are heavy - Jumbo approximately 600-800kg
Coverage Variant-dependent: 125L to 1000L As a mulch: 1000L covers approximately 14 sqm at 7cm depth Mixed 50:50 with topsoil for raised beds: 1000L creates approximately 2 sqm of bed at 1m depth
Origin British supplier (Dandy's Topsoil, Wales)
Trusted UK retailer Norfolk family farm

About this product

Full description

If there's a single product that allotmenteers, no-dig gardeners and serious kitchen-gardeners have quietly relied on for decades, it's spent mushroom compost. Properly rotted, properly handled, and arriving at you ready to use, it's one of the great unsung soil improvers in British gardening — the kind of bulk material that makes a measurable difference to a vegetable plot or a clay border within a single season.

From Dandy's Topsoil, our trusted bulk-supply partners — specialists in topsoils, mulches, composts and garden aggregates. Available in seven sizes from small handy bags right through to a full cubic-metre jumbo.

What it actually is

Spent mushroom compost is a rich mixture of well-rotted organic farmyard manure (horse and chicken muck with straw), which serves a working term growing mushrooms before being bagged for garden use. Don't worry — you won't get crops of mushrooms appearing in your borders. By the time it reaches you, the mushroom-growing phase is finished and the material is a properly composted, friable, easy-to-handle soil improver in its own right.

It's perfect for no-dig gardens — the soil-improvement-through-mulching approach pioneered by gardeners like Charles Dowding that's become hugely popular in recent years. A generous annual mulch of spent mushroom compost, spread directly onto undisturbed soil, suppresses weeds, holds moisture, feeds the soil life, and incorporates itself into the topsoil through worm activity over the year. Cleaner, less back-breaking, and arguably more productive than traditional digging.

The real benefits

  • Improves soil structure — enhances aeration and drainage in heavy clay soils, while improving water retention in light, sandy ones. The same material genuinely helps both extremes
  • Rich in organic matter — replenishes the organic content that years of cropping and weathering inevitably deplete. Healthier root development, more active soil microbes, better resilience
  • Adds essential nutrients — nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium are all present in proper plant-available form. A genuine slow-release feed
  • Natural pH buffer — the lime content (from the mushroom-growing process) gives it a slightly alkaline character, which helps neutralise acidic soils naturally
  • Eco-friendly recycling — repurposing material from the UK's mushroom-farming industry, supporting circular agriculture and reducing waste

An important note on pH

Spent mushroom compost is slightly alkaline — the chalk and lime added during the mushroom-growing process give it a pH typically between 6.5 and 8.0. This is genuinely useful for:

  • Heavy, acidic clay soils — brings the pH towards neutral and improves structure at the same time
  • Vegetable plots — most vegetables prefer slightly alkaline conditions; brassicas in particular thrive in limed soil
  • Asparagus beds — the traditional perennial-vegetable use that allotmenteers have quietly used for generations
  • Fruit cages with currants and gooseberries — happy in alkaline soil

However, please don't use spent mushroom compost around ericaceous (acid-loving) plants:

  • Rhododendrons and azaleas
  • Camellias
  • Blueberries, cranberries and other ericaceous fruit
  • Heathers (Calluna and Erica)
  • Pieris, witch hazels, and other lime-haters

For these plants you want a peat-free ericaceous compost instead. Spent mushroom compost will gradually shift the soil pH towards alkaline and these acid-loving plants will struggle and ultimately fail.

What it's for

  • No-dig mulching — the headline use. Spread a generous 5–7cm layer over undug soil in autumn or early spring; the worms incorporate it through the year
  • Soil improvement on heavy clay — either as a thick mulch or worked in lightly; transforms structure over two or three seasons
  • Vegetable plot enrichment — particularly for brassicas (cabbages, kale, sprouts, cauliflower), asparagus, peas and beans, and the alliums
  • Top-dressing for established borders — the autumn spread is one of the great unfashionable garden labours that pays back generously
  • Filling raised beds — mix 50:50 with topsoil for a properly fertile starting medium for vegetables
  • Soil improver for new lawns — mix into the top layer when preparing a new lawn area
  • Around fruit trees — an annual mulched ring (kept clear of the trunk) feeds the tree and suppresses competing weeds

Choosing your bag size

Available in seven sizes:

  • Jumbo Bulk Bag — approximately 1000 litres (one cubic metre) — the largest, and the genuine best-value per litre
  • Standard Bulk Bag — approximately 750 litres — the size most builders' merchants use
  • Half Bulk Bag — approximately 500 litres
  • 40 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 1000 litres in carry-friendly bags
  • 20 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 500 litres in handy bags
  • 10 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 250 litres
  • 5 × 25-litre Handy Bags — 125 litres — the smallest, for a single project

The bulk bags are properly the best value if you have space to receive a pallet and access for it to be dropped. The handy bags are the answer if you have access difficulties — a narrow path, steps, a flat with no garden access — since each 25-litre bag can be carried by hand.

About Dandy's

Dandy's are our trusted bulk-supply partners — a long-established Welsh family business specialising in topsoils, mulches, composts and garden aggregates, supplied direct in bulk and handy bags. We stock their range because they do the unglamorous bulk products properly: well-screened materials, honest descriptions, sensible bag sizes for both serious gardeners and small projects. They've also been 100% peat-free for years — long before the law required it.

A small thought: there's something properly satisfying about an old-fashioned soil improver like spent mushroom compost — the kind of material that allotmenteers have quietly relied on for fifty years, properly composted, properly handled, and properly effective. The kind of compost that doesn't need clever branding or seasonal claims. Just rich, friable, well-rotted organic matter, ready to do its slow patient work in the soil.

What's included
Variant-dependent - 125L to 1000L of well-rotted spent mushroom compost,
bulk bag or 25L handy bag format.
Care and use
- Store dry if not used immediately - cover bulk bags with a tarpaulin
- For no-dig: spread 5-7cm thick over undug soil; worms incorporate over time
- For raised beds: mix 50:50 with topsoil
- DO NOT use around ericaceous plants (rhododendrons, camellias, blueberries, heathers)
- Apply annually for best soil-building results