Decided to experiment with some organic soil additives
Posted: Mon Feb 16, 2009 11:45 am
Ran across this recipe, author claims great results. Decided to try it this year.
1 part bone meal or rock phosphate
1 part lime (dolomite)
1/2 part kelp meal
4 parts cotton seed meal (or other seed meal)
I'm also going to toss a little blood meal into the mix
Suggested application rate: 1 gallon per 100 square feet, plus a couple of handfulls under transplants or hills.
Also, I was quite pleased to find a local source for bulk perlite at $25 for a 4 cubic foot bag. Still expensive, but cheap compared to bying those 4 quart bags for three or four dollars. I think that the addition of perlite to my potting soil will help my container plants by opening the soil and keeping it from getting water logged in the bottom half of larger containers.
Anyone have any suggestions? Soil is very sandy, but has had compost and compost leaf mold mix added for years, so should have plenty of organic content at this point. Raised beds (not in contact with soil) are filled with a mix of compost, commercial potting soil, and aged horse manure. Have never added anything except slow release osmocote fertilizer.
1 part bone meal or rock phosphate
1 part lime (dolomite)
1/2 part kelp meal
4 parts cotton seed meal (or other seed meal)
I'm also going to toss a little blood meal into the mix
Suggested application rate: 1 gallon per 100 square feet, plus a couple of handfulls under transplants or hills.
Also, I was quite pleased to find a local source for bulk perlite at $25 for a 4 cubic foot bag. Still expensive, but cheap compared to bying those 4 quart bags for three or four dollars. I think that the addition of perlite to my potting soil will help my container plants by opening the soil and keeping it from getting water logged in the bottom half of larger containers.
Anyone have any suggestions? Soil is very sandy, but has had compost and compost leaf mold mix added for years, so should have plenty of organic content at this point. Raised beds (not in contact with soil) are filled with a mix of compost, commercial potting soil, and aged horse manure. Have never added anything except slow release osmocote fertilizer.