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The Right Rooftop Soil: You Can't Grow Without It at Home | tna W rna

Jun 22, 2026 / By Anas Heaba / in Growing Guides

Imagine you bought a nice pepper seedling from the nursery, planted it in a pot on the rooftop, watered it with love, and after a week found it wilted and the soil hard as clay. Is the problem in your hands? Most of the time, no, the problem is in the soil you put the plant in. Regular soil from the ground or from a bag of heavy clay is not suitable for growing in pots on the rooftop, especially in our hot climate.

This matter is not a luxury; it is the foundation for the success of any rooftop garden in Egypt. If you want your plants to live and bear fruit instead of dying after two weeks, you must understand how to prepare light, well-draining soil that retains appropriate moisture. Today we will talk about ready-made mixes, how to make your own mix (DIY), and simple tests to ensure the soil is right.

A woman holding a wilted tomato seedling in a pot with cracked soil on a house rooftop

Why is this matter important?

In Egypt, the temperature on the rooftop can reach 60 degrees Celsius in summer, and regular soil (like clay or heavy agricultural soil) hardens and cracks, suffocating roots because it prevents air from entering. Also, water scarcity at home makes the need for soil that retains water longer a necessity, not a choice. Suitable soil reduces water consumption by 30-40% because it retains moisture better and needs less watering.

Cost also matters. If you buy poor-quality ready-made soil, you will have to buy new seedlings every month. But if you invest in a good soil mix once, it will last you for years and will significantly increase plant productivity. In the small spaces where we grow in pots, soil quality is the only factor you can control to compensate for the lack of space.

The root of the problem

Regular soil (what we call soil) consists of very fine particles like clay and silt, and the spaces between the particles are very small. When you put it in a pot on the rooftop, rain or irrigation water compresses the particles together, so the spaces disappear, air doesn't enter, and water stands on top. The result: plant roots suffocate, harmful fungi and bacteria multiply, and the plant dies.

In contrast, the appropriate potting mix is not soil in the literal sense; it is a mixture of organic and mineral materials like perlite, vermiculite, peat moss, compost, and coco coir. These materials create large air spaces between particles, so water drains quickly, air reaches the roots, and roots can spread easily. The idea is that you want soil like a sponge: it retains enough water, but if you squeeze it with your hand, the water comes out easily.

Hands mixing peat moss, perlite, vermiculite, and compost in a plastic tub on a house rooftop

The solution step by step

  1. Determine your plants' needs: Leafy vegetables (lettuce, spinach) need soil rich in organic fertilizer (compost) and that retains high moisture. Root vegetables (carrots, radishes) need very light and sandy soil so roots can grow without obstacles. Succulent plants (cactus, aloe vera) need very dry soil that drains water quickly.
  2. Buy a suitable ready-made mix: If you don't want to make your own mix, look in nurseries for "potting mix for containers" and make sure it is light and labeled as suitable for container growing. Avoid the heavy black soil (clay) that is sold cheaply.
  3. Make your own mix (DIY): The basic recipe for any mix: one part peat moss or coco coir (for moisture retention), one part perlite or vermiculite (for aeration), and one part mature compost (for nutrition). Mix them well in a large plastic tub. If you want soil for succulents, increase the amount of perlite and reduce the compost.
  4. Test the soil before planting: Take a handful of the moistened mix and squeeze it in your hand. If drops of water come out, the drainage is excellent. If a stream of water comes out, it needs more perlite. If no water comes out at all, it needs more peat moss or coco coir.
  5. Sterilize the soil (optional): If you are using soil from an old garden or from the street, heat it in the oven at 80 degrees Celsius for 30 minutes to kill weed seeds and fungi. Or leave it in a black bag under the sun for two weeks.
A hand squeezing a handful of moist soil mix showing water droplets without flow, with a basil pot on a rooftop

Practical tips and tools

  • Always use pots with drainage holes at the base, and cover the holes with a piece of gauze or broken pottery so the soil doesn't escape with the water.
  • Place a layer of gravel or broken pottery at the bottom of the pot (about 2-3 cm) to help with excess drainage.
  • Renew the surface compost layer every 3 months by adding 2 cm of mature compost on top of the soil, and turning it gently.
  • Buy an inexpensive pH meter (test strip or simple electronic device) and ensure the soil pH is between 6 and 7. Most plants like this neutral to slightly acidic range.
  • In summer, cover the soil surface in pots with rice straw or wood chips (mulch) to reduce water evaporation and keep roots cool.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Using soil from the garden or street: This soil is compacted, full of weed seeds, and transmits diseases and fungi. Correction: Use a ready-made mix or make your own mix.
  • Adding builder's sand to the soil for drainage: Builder's sand is very fine and makes matters worse because it clogs pores. Correction: Use perlite, vermiculite, or coarse sand (large particles).
  • Not changing the soil every year or two: Soil in pots loses its nutrients and becomes compacted over time. Correction: Change the soil every year for vegetables and every two years for perennials, or renew it by adding compost and peat moss.
  • Over-watering because the soil is heavy: If the soil doesn't drain water well, over-watering suffocates the roots. Correction: Test the soil with your finger before watering; if the top 2 cm are dry, water.
  • Using peat moss alone: Peat moss alone retains too much water and makes it difficult for roots to breathe. Correction: Peat moss should always be mixed with perlite and compost.
Three different soil mixes in clear plastic cups labeled A B C with a hand pouring water into one

Frequently Asked Questions

I have old soil in the pots, can I use it again?

You can, but you must sterilize and renew it. Remove the soil from the pot, sift it to remove old roots, add new compost at a 1:1 ratio, and spray it with a mild solution of hydrogen peroxide (3%) to kill fungi. After that, use it normally.

What is the difference between peat moss and coco coir?

Peat moss is extracted from peat bogs, retains high moisture, and slightly acidifies the soil. Coco coir is extracted from coconut husks, retains slightly less moisture, maintains a neutral pH, and decomposes slower. Both are good, but coco coir is better in Egypt because it is cheaper and more sustainable.

I have succulent plants (cactus), do they need special soil?

Yes. Succulents need soil that drains water very quickly. Make a mix: one part light potting soil, one part coarse sand (or perlite), and one part small gravel or broken pottery. And don't add too much compost.

Can I use animal manure instead of compost?

It is forbidden to use fresh manure because it burns roots and attracts insects. The manure must be composted (fermented) for at least 6 months. It is better to buy ready-made compost from the nursery.

Succulent plants in small terracotta pots with a gritty soil mix containing perlite and small gravel on a rooftop edge

Summary

The right soil is not a luxury; it is the foundation of any successful rooftop garden in Egypt. By choosing a suitable mix (ready-made or DIY), applying simple tests like the squeeze test, and avoiding common mistakes like using street soil or builder's sand, you will save your money and effort and see your plants grow strong and bear fruit. Start today by preparing a soil mix for one pot, and experience the difference yourself. If you liked the content, follow the "Rooftop Gardens at Home" series every day, and we will continue with you step by step.


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