We toil and grow our own, but just because our pods look amazing, does that mean they are actually healthy? I mean nutrition wise. We've all eaten store bought huge glorious looking tomatoes that are tasteless, so looks can be deceiving. The department of agriculture has done studies over several decades that confirm our soil/produce is diminishing in nutrient levels. What if we could make our peppers both taste better AND be more nutritious?
I container grow and reuse the soil each year, I add some Espoma Organic garden lime (pelletized dolomite limestone) and some dry organic fertilizer and kick it off. Throughout the season I rotate using Neptune's Harvest Fish & Seaweed Blend, Epsom Salts, and Dr Earth Home Grown Tomato Vegetable and Herb Fertilizer (good source of calcium). All have performed exceedingly well.
I got to thinking the other day about how I'd really like to somehow "recharge" this soil each year with some kind of amendment that has "everything" nutrition wise that the body needs. I came across this the other day and have just started using it. I couldn't find any mention of it on here so I thought I would post some info for anyone interested...
This is SEA-90 Sea Mineral Solids, which is just dehydrated sea salt from the Sea of Cortez, it's analyzed for purity and safety. It contains nearly all of the minerals and trace elements and can be used as a soil amendment, root drench, foliar spray, compost additive and tea. There is instructions for all uses and the reviews I've read on this stuff are wildly positive. It can be mixed with fish/humate liquid fertilizer to adjust the PH as well (see bottom right).
If you buy direct (I did) they have a special where you can order their gourmet sea salt along with the fertilizer for cheaper than what you can get just the fertilizer on Amazon. Their salt tastes amazing too, better than any other kind I've ever tried.
I container grow and reuse the soil each year, I add some Espoma Organic garden lime (pelletized dolomite limestone) and some dry organic fertilizer and kick it off. Throughout the season I rotate using Neptune's Harvest Fish & Seaweed Blend, Epsom Salts, and Dr Earth Home Grown Tomato Vegetable and Herb Fertilizer (good source of calcium). All have performed exceedingly well.
I got to thinking the other day about how I'd really like to somehow "recharge" this soil each year with some kind of amendment that has "everything" nutrition wise that the body needs. I came across this the other day and have just started using it. I couldn't find any mention of it on here so I thought I would post some info for anyone interested...
This is SEA-90 Sea Mineral Solids, which is just dehydrated sea salt from the Sea of Cortez, it's analyzed for purity and safety. It contains nearly all of the minerals and trace elements and can be used as a soil amendment, root drench, foliar spray, compost additive and tea. There is instructions for all uses and the reviews I've read on this stuff are wildly positive. It can be mixed with fish/humate liquid fertilizer to adjust the PH as well (see bottom right).
If you buy direct (I did) they have a special where you can order their gourmet sea salt along with the fertilizer for cheaper than what you can get just the fertilizer on Amazon. Their salt tastes amazing too, better than any other kind I've ever tried.
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.