DoubleDogFarm
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 6113
Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2010 11:43 pm

:)

GardenJester
Senior Member
Posts: 244
Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2010 9:59 pm

Last couple of years I used MG, but this year, I tried out organic methods. I haven't noticed much difference. which lead me to think MG is overrated. But if you have poor soil, MG might indeed make a difference.

sciencegal
Senior Member
Posts: 122
Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2010 2:17 pm

rainbowgardener wrote:... and never let them see a chemical again!
Well, except for a little hydrogen oxide now and then. :)

specgrade
Senior Member
Posts: 124
Joined: Thu Jul 01, 2010 9:35 am
Location: Ohio

sciencegal wrote:
rainbowgardener wrote:... and never let them see a chemical again!
Well, except for a little hydrogen oxide now and then. :)
That's water right?? I'm trying to catch on around here. Gardening can be soooo technical. :lol:

I can't count how many times, when I was a kid, I would take a seed and stick it in the ground and it would just grow. It has to be that easy...it just has to be :shock: :D

User avatar
rainbowgardener
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 25279
Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
Location: TN/GA 7b

Hydrogen dioxide? Otherwise known as H20? :)

Of course everything can ultimately be broken down into chemicals/ atoms and molecules. But I'm making a distinction between organic and inorganic chemistry and between naturally occurring substances and synthetics...

sciencegal
Senior Member
Posts: 122
Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2010 2:17 pm

rainbowgardener wrote:Hydrogen dioxide? Otherwise known as H20? :)

Of course everything can ultimately be broken down into chemicals/ atoms and molecules. But I'm making a distinction between organic and inorganic chemistry and between naturally occurring substances and synthetics...
You can't synthesize a basic element. Nitrogen is nitrogen. You can't synthesize it. My MG tomato food has basic elements or chemical compounds in it. The copper is in the form of copper sulfate. This is the same stuff I feed free choice to my goats in their loose mineral mix. It's the most bioavailable source of copper for them. I don't consider it a "bad" chemical.

And, yes. Water, hydrogen oxide, is a chemical compound which can be synthesized. Eat an antacid and when it mixes with the hydrochloric acid in your stomach you will get water and calcium chloride.

garden5
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 3062
Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2009 5:40 pm
Location: ohio

DDF is right, you don't need it for seed-starting. I used regular dirt amended with some organic matter. Like one other poster said, they were not quite as big as the ones in the stores, but once in the ground they catch up fine.

FarmerBobNot
Newly Registered
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Jul 02, 2010 12:48 pm
Location: Omaha, NE

GardenJester wrote:Last couple of years I used MG, but this year, I tried out organic methods. I haven't noticed much difference. which lead me to think MG is overrated. But if you have poor soil, MG might indeed make a difference.
Hi GardenJester,
I am new to this or any Forum and a new gardener. Concerning MG - isn't too early to tell the difference in growth levels? I like your process and was thinking of using MG this weekend for the first time. I have had great luck with tomatoes, cucumbers and zucchini without any MG. I almost hate to spoil the organic feel for it all. But, everyone I know uses it.

petechapman
Full Member
Posts: 11
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 9:29 am
Location: Silsden, Yorkshire, United Kingdom

I try to be as organic as I can...but pragmatic when it comes to pests and stuff.

I use my own compost - we have a horse and a couple of chickens so I am not short of manure! - but I will use chemicals when threatened by the dark side!

Some people can be a bit snobby about organic topics in my view. After all, at least you are out there helping cultivate and make beautiful!. You aren;t concreting the world with patio's and block paving all over the place.

So a bit of balance in my view. As organic as possible supported by a big of pragmatism.
l

DoubleDogFarm
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 6113
Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2010 11:43 pm

Pete,
I will use chemicals when threatened by the dark side!
I believe chemicals are the dark side. :lol: and if this makes me snobby, I'll except that. :P

Eric

User avatar
lakngulf
Greener Thumb
Posts: 1294
Joined: Mon May 10, 2010 4:34 pm
Location: Lake Martin, AL

petechapman wrote:I try to be as organic as I can...but pragmatic when it comes to pests and stuff.

I use my own compost - we have a horse and a couple of chickens so I am not short of manure! - but I will use chemicals when threatened by the dark side!

Some people can be a bit snobby about organic topics in my view. After all, at least you are out there helping cultivate and make beautiful!. You aren;t concreting the world with patio's and block paving all over the place.

So a bit of balance in my view. As organic as possible supported by a big of pragmatism.
l
Well said !!!

User avatar
rainbowgardener
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 25279
Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
Location: TN/GA 7b

garden5 wrote:DDF is right, you don't need it for seed-starting. I used regular dirt amended with some organic matter. Like one other poster said, they were not quite as big as the ones in the stores, but once in the ground they catch up fine.
Perhaps you don't understand the scale on which I do seed starting, 500 plants. I went through three of the giant bags of potting soil this winter/spring, the ones that are as tall as I am.... My city lot full of clay, I don't HAVE that much garden dirt lying around loose. Not to mention I don't bring garden dirt in the house without sterilizing it, because it brings bugs and stuff in with it. That would be a ton of dirt to run through my oven, stinking up the house. And of course it doesn't work as well.

Even DDF's suggestion of buy some organic alternative. I would if I could, but I only see them in small expensive bags.

I am a mostly organic garden, in fact I think I can safely say my actual garden/yard is entirely organic. But we do do all have to figure out what works for us and make whatever compromises make it work.

User avatar
applestar
Mod
Posts: 30540
Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 7:21 pm
Location: Zone 6, NJ (3/M)4/E ~ 10/M(11/B)

I like the idea that there are unseen forces at work, in the soil, on the plants and in the air. I 've come to accept that when synthesized chemicals are used without understanding the on-going biology at work, the delicately balanced microcosm can be disrupted. I'm also experiencing personally, how well the system works when I sit back and be an observer and an apprentice. :D

ETA - RBG, this is NOT in response to your post, you got one in while I was trying to articulate my feelings. :wink:

DoubleDogFarm
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 6113
Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2010 11:43 pm

Perhaps you don't understand the scale on which I do seed starting, 500 plants. I went through three of the giant bags of potting soil this winter/spring, the ones that are as tall as I am.... My city lot full of clay, I don't HAVE that much garden dirt lying around loose. Not to mention I don't bring garden dirt in the house without sterilizing it, because it brings bugs and stuff in with it. That would be a ton of dirt to run through my oven, stinking up the house. And of course it doesn't work as well.

Even DDF's suggestion of buy some organic alternative. I would if I could, but I only see them in small expensive bags.
Well if you have been following any of my earlier post, I sell vegetable starts at the Farmer's Market every Saturday. I deliver about 250 plants each time. Mind you, they all don't sell. I have probably have sold some where between 750 and a 1000 plants and the summer is not over. :)

Have you done any math. I buy organic 2 cu ft bags of potting soil. They are about $8.50. So a 4" pot, costs about .04 cents to fill. .04 X 500 = $20.00. I would not call this exspensive.
I am a mostly organic garden, in fact I think I can safely say my actual garden/yard is entirely organic. But we do do all have to figure out what works for us and make whatever compromises make it work.
I agree 100%

Eric

petechapman
Full Member
Posts: 11
Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 9:29 am
Location: Silsden, Yorkshire, United Kingdom

Listen, I agree. Feeding the land and plants the natural way is best...for absolute surety.

....and the dark side is destroying the land for sure....its just I hate pests that eat my veg...so I am prone to zap them with a bit of chemical destruction....

although I have always found that slugs like to commit suicide in a buried jam jar full of beer!

DoubleDogFarm
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 6113
Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2010 11:43 pm

pete,

Don't take me to seriously, like a grain of salt. :lol:
although I have always found that slugs like to commit suicide in a buried jam jar full of beer
I too, like to drown in a pint of beer. :wink:

specgrade
Senior Member
Posts: 124
Joined: Thu Jul 01, 2010 9:35 am
Location: Ohio

Boy, I really know how to start a fire. :lol: Thank you all the insightful answers.

User avatar
Halfway
Green Thumb
Posts: 600
Joined: Sun Nov 08, 2009 9:48 am
Location: Northern Rockies

Hey, I like the taste of a spotted owl roasted over a fresh burning tire, but to each his own right?

Seriously though, I used MG potting mix for the same reasons stated above for my starts. The price is right, it works well, and not burning nat gas in my oven to sterilize against bugs and germs.

Once in the raised beds, the existing compost and additional compost provide the balance needed for the rest of the year. So far so good.

As this is my first serious year, I am setting those lessons learned in place for next year. Just a couple so far.......

NO peet pots.

YES to MG for starts.

sweet thunder
Senior Member
Posts: 210
Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:43 pm
Location: Eureka, CA

Out of curiosity, is it really that hard for many of you to find bagged alternatives to Miracle Grow? A couple of my local stores carry the MG potting mixes, but only in small bags. The big bags stacked outside the store are almost always organic and really good quality, and they go on sale at least a few times a season. Of course, my location could have something to do with it (I live in the pot growing capital of the US) but I seem to remember finding good quality soil mixes back east, too.

GardenJester
Senior Member
Posts: 244
Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2010 9:59 pm

DoubleDogFarm wrote:pete,

Don't take me to seriously, like a grain of salt. :lol:
although I have always found that slugs like to commit suicide in a buried jam jar full of beer
I too, like to drown in a pint of beer. :wink:
yeah... well... I always offer more than a grain of salt when I talk to the slugs in my garden. :P

and I only talk to slugs after I have downed at least a pint of beer. :P

garden5
Super Green Thumb
Posts: 3062
Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2009 5:40 pm
Location: ohio

RBG, you're right when it comes to having to do what our circumstances allow us to do. I was lucky enough to have a nice pile of compost/dirt, so that's what I used. Some have pretty hard soil, so they're not that lucky.

500 plants? Wow, that is a lot (and I know you up-pot, too), so I can see the volume of soil you go through.

Personally, I don't run my dirt through the oven. I'm sure it's good, but the small millipedes that crawl across the dirt don't bother me, and if they escape into the basement, they'll probably just die and be swept, vacuumed, or mopped up eventually.

But there again, some folks don't have basements, so what works for one, might not work for another.



Return to “Vegetable Gardening Forum”