Plants need calcium throughout their growth/fruiting cycle and if your mix needs it there's no time like the present.
Calcium is critical in the flowering and fruiting stages. It is however, the changeover period that is most critical that will determine the quality of the final reproductive stage. At this stage, an additional nutrient is badly needed by the plant. And this is calcium phosphate, Calcium phosphate is good for the plants "morning sickness". It is the stage that additional baby needs to be fed or the process where flower/fruit is about to come.
egg shell is great for this the above is a quote. from Gil A. Carandang
Is calcium chloride a good way to deliver calcium to the plant? I want to mix it in water for a foliar spray, but not sure of what concentration to use. I don't want to use egg shells, nobody here eats eggs. I have pelletized lime but not sure how much to use, and it's too late to work it into the soil. The only way I can think of is to add some in a pile at the base of the plant but I don't know how much to use. Seems like it would take a long time to dissolve. Anyone have some advice on this?
I would not use CaCl.
CaCO3 is available in a ton of forms. I used oyster-shell precipitate (Kirkland/Costco-brand Calcium supplement pills, like vitamins) that I have kicking around the house. Three of those to a pint of water (saturated/suspended solution), and a teaspoon of Epsom Salts (for Mg) and my plants are happy campers. I used it in the stage where the side leaves and buds were small, before the plants really began to add foliage.
Other sources of Ca - bonemeal, powdered lime, chalk, etc. These are slower to be taken-up by the plant (lower solubility in water). Tums and chalk can be used just as the oyster-shell precipitate, direct application of a solution/suspension to the soil if you've established your soil and plants.
I do have powdered chalk. I use it for brewing, but in that application I notice it is not really possible to dissolve it in water as you said. Did you just add the three oyster precipitate to the water then water the plant with it?
Would it be better to add a heap of bonemeal to the base of the plant than do this? How much per plant? They range from about 5 to 18 inches tall right now.
For you guys that make your own stuff try some snail shells, You think egg shells stink, wait for the smell of frying sail shells!!
snailshells or any mussels like clams or oysters will do. but i dunno how you make that into that stuff.