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organic Homemade Liquid Organic Fertilizer

just wanna share this one that i found while browsing the net

Make your own free liquid organic fertilizer when your garden needs a tonic to boost growth. These simple recipes work better than commercial products, and can be made from what you have on hand.
One of the criticisms of organic fertilizers is that they work very slowly. When your plants show signs of nutrient deficiency or slowed growth you need a quick fix. A liquid organic fertilizer can give you dramatic results fast.
You will need something to brew your fertilizer teas in. I like buckets with lids. I don’t know a single gnome that can lift a 5 gallon bucket, but it might be ideal for you. Any size is fine. Put holes in the lid to let gas out and air in. The lid keeps mosquitoes out.


Brewing Manure Tea

Manure is nothing more than digested plant material. Herbivores are just living compost tumblers that quickly break down organic materials. Any manure is fine except cat and dog. Those shouldn’t be used on vegetables because of the parasites they may contain.
I prefer poultry manure because it contains more nitrogen than other types. Poultry manure contains the urine as well as solids. The birds also digest plants or grains more completely, so the manure dissolves better in the tea. But, any herbivore manure will work.

Manure Tea Recipe
Fill a bucket half full of manure and then to the top with water. Cover the bucket, with holes in the lid for air. Leave it to stew for at least a month, stirring about once a week. That’s it. When using the tea, dilute it with one part tea to about 10 parts water and apply at the base of your plants.
Some like to strain the tea. I like to let the undissolved residue accumulate under my plants as mulch.


Brewing Weed Teas

Yes, weeds make great liquid organic fertilizers. You probably put most of the green weeds and plant residue into your compost pile. But you can also brew a great tonic from that same green residue.
Plants harvest nutrients from the soil to grow new cell tissue. As your weeds and residue steep in your tea bucket, those same nutrients will again become available to feed your new plants.
Different plants harvest different minerals, so a good mix of plants will improve the tea. Green plants and grass clipping will dissolve quickly in water, making your tea a more potent tonic.

Weed Tea Recipe:
Fill the bucket half full with a mix of weeds and green plant matter, including grass clippings if available and then to the top with water. Stir it a couple of times each week and let is sit with the lid on for at least 3 weeks. Dillute the tea 10 to 1 with water and apply to the base of your plants.

Comfrey Tea
Comfrey tea deserves special mention. Comfrey is an old time livestock feed, eaten green or as hay by cattle and other livestock.
You should grow some in a corner of your garden. Comfrey is a perennial. It grows prolifically, so be prepared to contain it. It is propagated from root cuttings and any piece or root left in the soil will grow.
Brew comfrey just like any weed tea. Comfrey tea makes a powerful liquid organic fertilizer. The roots run very deep and pull up minerals that other plants cannot reach. It is particularly rich in potassium.
Comfrey is also one of the few plants rich in vitamin B12, which stimulates rapid root growth. B12 reduces transplant shock, so use comfrey tea (diluted) at transplanting time.

Seaweed Tea
If you live near the coast, seaweed is plentiful on the beaches for the gathering. Seaweed is rich in minerals and nitrogen, and can be brewed into a potent liquid fertilizer.
Seaweed is salty and that can affect your soil, so rinse it thoroughly before putting it into the bucket. Chopping it up will also speed the process. Let it steep in the bucket for 3 to 4 weeks. Dilute and use as you would any weed tea.

The Egg Factor
Never throw an eggshell away. They are high in potassium and calcium, both essential plant nutrients .
You could put them in the compost pile . But, they are even more effective if they are dried, crushed and turned to near powder in a blender. Put the crushed shells of one to two dozen eggs into the fertilizer teas as you make them.
There you have it, several ways to boost the productivity of your garden with your own homemade liquid organic fertilizer.
Happy gardening,
 
hmmm...don't know about that...i'd be worried about it turning anaerobic and harboring bad bacteria(s). when brewing tea, 20 or so hrs with an air pump using a small amount of a simple sugar such as molasses is adequate. compost tea should always smell like fresh compost. if it has any bad aroma, it's gone anaerobic. to 5 gallons of non-chlorinated water i add:
2 cups of compost in a paint strainer bag with an airstone
5 tbls of blackstrap molasses
3 tbls rock powder
5 tbls fish emulsion
5 tbls liquid seaweed
2 tbls vinegar
a few drops of veg oil (to keep foaming down)
also, add a few airstones to bucket
 
I use tea's as an additional supplement to fertilizer not a replacement. It's going to be hard giving a very nutrient depending plant such as a pepper enough of what it needs to thrive by giving them teas alone.
 
I use tea's as an additional supplement to fertilizer not a replacement. It's going to be hard giving a very nutrient depending plant such as a pepper enough of what it needs to thrive by giving them teas alone.

My plants only get teas, so it is possible. If you start off with a good soil, and keep up with the teas. That's all you need. You can always make a tea high in Nitrogen, Calcium or Phosphorous if that's what the plant needs.
 
I use tea's as an additional supplement to fertilizer not a replacement. It's going to be hard giving a very nutrient depending plant such as a pepper enough of what it needs to thrive by giving them teas alone.

not if your organic ferts are added to the tea b4 brewing...
 
It's funny how people are so adamant about using all this organic stuff on their peppers and then they eat pesticide grown veggies from the store. :lol:
 
Its all about caring about what u grow so most people will do evrything for there plants to grow to there fullest
 
My plants only get teas, so it is possible. If you start off with a good soil, and keep up with the teas. That's all you need. You can always make a tea high in Nitrogen, Calcium or Phosphorous if that's what the plant needs.

True that's all they need to grow and produce fruit, but I said "thrive". The first couple of years my plants grew fine and produced a couple of pounds of fruit per plant which is fine. However the following year I did a lot more research and took a scientific method to growing and my plants then produced a lb of fruit weekly.

It's one thing to get a plant to produce fruit it's another to harvest 15-20lbs of fruit from 1 plant in 1 season. For me it's all about the http://www.maximumyield.com/
 
True that's all they need to grow and produce fruit, but I said "thrive". The first couple of years my plants grew fine and produced a couple of pounds of fruit per plant which is fine. However the following year I did a lot more research and took a scientific method to growing and my plants then produced a lb of fruit weekly.

It's one thing to get a plant to produce fruit it's another to harvest 15-20lbs of fruit from 1 plant in 1 season. For me it's all about the http://www.maximumyield.com/

Are you saying it's not possible to do this with only teas? I have no doubt my manzanos will surpass that 15-20lb per plant mark, they are loaded and this is from teas only. I have a Hab stacked with pods in a 10ga pot and the season has barely started. I am sure I can get a few more flushes out of that bad boy! And I mean stacked with pods, as in pounds.

I am not arguing that you can grow, I am sure there are other ways to increase yields. But I also know you can do just as good with strictly compost/nutrient teas. Why? Because I am doing it now. I barely started growing in August, only been using teas. I brew the teas with the organic nutrients the plant needs to produce fruit.....and thrive. If you have any doubts check out my grow log, my plants speak for themselves.

I try to never be argumentative and say "can't" to someone, I can and will grow beautiful thriving pepper plants with organics, it's all about the way you do it. Nobody grows the same and my method may not work for others, but it does work for me! :)
 
True that's all they need to grow and produce fruit, but I said "thrive". The first couple of years my plants grew fine and produced a couple of pounds of fruit per plant which is fine. However the following year I did a lot more research and took a scientific method to growing and my plants then produced a lb of fruit weekly.

It's one thing to get a plant to produce fruit it's another to harvest 15-20lbs of fruit from 1 plant in 1 season. For me it's all about the http://www.maximumyield.com/


see previous reply

It's funny how people are so adamant about using all this organic stuff on their peppers and then they eat pesticide grown veggies from the store. :lol:

We grow much of our own produce and buy from our farmers market where many vendors sell pure organics.
 
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