Hi everyone, I'm a long-time viewer of the forum and this is my first ever post on thehotpepper.com. I understand that there are many of these types of inquiries, so I apologize for adding another to the forum. I would love to rack your collective brains for any fertilizer help because I am a little overwhelmed with the sheer amount of fertilizer selection out there.
Anyways, long story short, I'm looking to experiment with some organic fertilizers in addition to my inorganic ones. I live in Alberta, Canada (plant hardiness zone 4a) so I have a relatively short outdoor growing season. That being said, I still feel like I am not getting the most out of my plants. I have come up with a nutrient blend and I was hoping that I could run it past you all and get some feedback on my shortcomings, nutrient wise. Here's what I have thus far:
1. Earthworm castings - relatively balanced NPK ratio, maybe 1-1-1. Use throughout season as a top dressing and/or tilled into soil
2. Bat guano - 0-13-1 dissolved into water for use during flowering (phosphorus source)
3. Kelp meal - 1-0.5-2.5 - '' '' '' '' (potassium source)
I suppose, given the obvious nitrogen deficiencies, I would treat those signs symptomatically (using 20-20-20 synthetic fertilizer). I may also till a household compost into the soil prior to planting in final containers to provide nitrogen.
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Any help would be greatly appreciated & thanks in advance!
Anyways, long story short, I'm looking to experiment with some organic fertilizers in addition to my inorganic ones. I live in Alberta, Canada (plant hardiness zone 4a) so I have a relatively short outdoor growing season. That being said, I still feel like I am not getting the most out of my plants. I have come up with a nutrient blend and I was hoping that I could run it past you all and get some feedback on my shortcomings, nutrient wise. Here's what I have thus far:
1. Earthworm castings - relatively balanced NPK ratio, maybe 1-1-1. Use throughout season as a top dressing and/or tilled into soil
2. Bat guano - 0-13-1 dissolved into water for use during flowering (phosphorus source)
3. Kelp meal - 1-0.5-2.5 - '' '' '' '' (potassium source)
I suppose, given the obvious nitrogen deficiencies, I would treat those signs symptomatically (using 20-20-20 synthetic fertilizer). I may also till a household compost into the soil prior to planting in final containers to provide nitrogen.
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Any help would be greatly appreciated & thanks in advance!