Commercial Organic Fertilizer
Organic
gardening is an agricultural trend that has more and more people composting
manure in their backyards. Unfortunately, not all organic home growers have
farmer’s access to manure or even a backyard on which to do the composting. To
answer this growing need, manufacturers have developed commercial organic
fertilizers.
Commercial
organic fertilizers makes it possible for those people who have little or no
access to organic dumps to still treat their soils without resorting to
synthetic or chemical fertilizers. And commercial organic fertilizers are
widely available. You can even purchase commercial organic fertilizers by the
bucketful from the country for many local governments are now sponsoring
composting projects at landfills.
What to
look for when you buy commercial organic fertilizers.
The
first thing you need to do before buying a commercial organic fertilizer is to
check the N-P-K number listings on the label. N-P-K stands for Nitrogen,
Phosphorus, and Potassium respectively. These three commercial organic
fertilizer ingredients are the three major nutrients that help plants grow.
The
way to know whether or not the fertilizer bag you’re holding is commercial
organic fertilizer or not is to check if any of the numbers of the N-P-K ratio
go higher than eight or when all three are summed up, can total to more than
fifteen. If they do either two, that means that you are holding a synthetic
fertilizer and not the commercial fertilizer that you are looking for. Keep in
mind that when dealing with commercial organic fertilizers, the N-P-K ratio
might not be as high as you are used to using chemical fertilizers.
The
second step would be to scan the list of ingredients used in the commercial
organic fertilizer. Ammonium, muriate, urea, nitrate, phosphoric, or
superphosphate – these are words you d not want to see on the label of your bag
of commercial organic fertilizer.
Other
than those ingredients mentioned above, you should also be careful with
commercial organic fertilizers that contain cottonseed meal and leather
tankage. These products are perfectly natural and it should make perfect sense
to use them in commercial organic fertilizers. The only problem is that they
may contain some harmful residues not good for an organic garden.
The
instructions indicated in the label of your commercial organic fertilizers are
placed there for a reason. Follow the steps specified in applying the
commercial organic fertilizer.
And before going all out and buying a commercial
organic fertilizer, be sure that you have tested your soil first for organic
matter level. Most commercial organic
fertilizers do not add to the organic matter in your soil (but this is unless
the commercial organic fertilizer you have bought is made from composted
manure).
When
buying commercial organic fertilizers, it is important that you never take the
word “organic” at face value. Driven by the lure of making sales, many
companies have succumbed to just adding tiny bits of organic materials, like
fish meal or seaweed, into their synthetic nutrients and then label them
commercial organic fertilizers. It is also equally important that you do not
take the word of the sales guy in your local garden center. Look into the bag
of commercial organic fertilizer and judge for yourself.
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