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-   -   Fertilizer confusion (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=41393)

crittergirl222 May 25, 2016 07:02 PM

Fertilizer confusion
 
Hello! I just received my plot in our neighborhood P Patch, and have planted my tomato seedlings in a raised bed filled with newly purchased gardening soil (sand + manure). I would like to fertilize as is appropriate (plan on making manure tea, mulching with compost and wood chips, but don't want to over do it. With brand new soil, is all this fertilizing going to over do it?

Also, what about adding worms?

:idea::)

PureHarvest May 27, 2016 07:45 AM

You can't manage what you don't measure. I.E. you need to send a sample off to a lab to know hat you have before you start adding nutrients. Otherwise, you are just guessing.

Al@NC May 27, 2016 11:16 AM

Crittergirl, welcome by the way!

Pureharvest is rite, if you just fertilize then who knows what your N/P/K ratio will be. Otherwise, adding worms is probably a great idea.

Al

Cole_Robbie May 27, 2016 04:49 PM

[I]mulching with compost and wood chips

[/I]I don't think you want to mulch with compost. Just the wood chips. Leave them on top of the soil, not worked into it. So next year, just scrape them off if you need to work anything else into the soil.

Everyone approaches fertilizer differently, plus everyone has different soil, so I doubt there is one right answer to your question. In general, compost and organic matter will make the plant uptake nutrients more efficiently. Some people get great results with just compost and don't have to add fertilizer at all. I would like to be that way, but I always cheat by injecting small amounts of soluble cal nitrate and 4-18-38 into the drip irrigation.

bower May 27, 2016 05:54 PM

If you're looking for a natural potassium source, you can choose kelp meal, greensand, or wood ashes but the ashes really raise pH too so can be tricky to guess how much.:?!?:


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