nickolas wrote:Are they all organic?
More or less. I guess it depends on your paranoia level
Are any of them cheap and easy to make or should I just buy them?
Blood or bone meal are slaughterhouse by-products. If you don't have the first, making the by-product is not practicle.
Ground limestone and ground dolomite are by product of quarrys. My failing memory tells me dolomitic (limestone) has more phosphorus in it.
Sometimes you will see this pelletized, which aides in application.
I think its worth noting all of these agricultural products are the left overs of doing something else. Generally the home sized value-pack is in 50 pound bags. Commercially you only pay a tiny fraction of the retail price when you buy by the ton. *If* you just happen to have a dump truck sitting idle...
And if I do buy them how much do I buy and what is the going price rate? And when I have them how much do I use? when do I use them? how do I apply them when I use them? what do I use them on? And lastly what are they make out of?
That depends, a soil test at some point is probably going to be a starting point, and speaking to your county agricultural office should help you translate a soil test result into a 'pounds per 100 square feet application rate'.
I am out of questions for now but I mite have more for you lot later.
There are no stupid questions. But which of these agricultural products your garden might need; have to have a begining point of lack in your soil. Like:
Bone meal, dolomitic limestone-- a lack of phosphorus in your dirt.
Blood meal--a lack of nitrogen
Plain-jane limestone, an acidic soil that needs sweetening.
If your paranoia level is high,
and the idea of prions, scare you spitless. Slaughter house by products might not be a good product for you.
I do expect that if I can find my way with this stuff you can too.