Bits about Fertilizers
There are many ideas about fertilizer that you will
hear from different gardeners. How they use fertilizer. When they use
their fertilizer? You may even hear about strange fertilizers that have
other uses that you may want to try. I have very poor soil where I live,
which is one of the reasons why I started using fertilizers in my gardens,
and this is another reason that I love my greenhouse so much! But, I still
find that I must better my soil over the next few years or my plants will
not continue to thrive after I take them out of the greenhouse.
Here is a little about how I use fertilizers in my
gardens and for my plants. Because my thoughts about gardening is that
I need to do everything as cheap as possible I recycle many things from
my home into my garden with just a few exceptions.
I recently planted some low-lying evergreens on my
hillside. I wanted something that will grow over the years, and that would
be low maintenance. These low evergreens will take years to grow, and
during these years I plan on giving them fertilizer spikes once a year.
Depending on the type of shrubs, bush, or ground cover that you choose
will depend on the particular amount you should give your evergreens.
I simply take this spike and pound it in
the ground up to a foot away from the evergreen as stated on the package.
This is all that I have to do for this particular plant every year. Over
the next five to ten years I will notice healthy green maintenance free
ground cover growing over my hillside. During the mean time when these
greens are growing slowly I can plant other types of flowers on the hillside
just to make it look fuller.
A great fertilizer for your azaleas is coffee grounds.
I simply wait until they are cold off and them sprinkle them around the
ground where I have my azaleas planted. I only do this two or three times
a year as I am still experimenting on how much they actually need to get
the acid that they like.
If you have a fish tank, when you change the water
in the fish tank you can use it in the greenhouse to water your plant
(filled with nutrients!) or you can use it to water your flower gardens
around the home. The nutrients in the water add more to the soil and help
the plants grow.
If you are an avid cook, or have the space to save
eggshells, crushed eggshells are a great addition to your soil that will
build the calcium in your soil over a period of time.
This article was published
by: Garden Moose.
Garden Moose is a
feature contributor to Greenhouses.com
a leading internet destination for gardening and greenhouse information
and ideas.
This work is licensed
under a Creative
Commons License.
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