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Use The Ultimate Fertilizer for Organic Gardens

Wood


Two Blends Are
All You Need
For Every Plant To Thrive 

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Fresh Beetroots

Root Crops & Bloomers Blend

This fertilizer represents the culmination of over 60 years of organic gardening experience, & many analyses of the formula by the University of Georgia Soil, Plant, and Water Laboratory, in a long quest for the ultimate organic fertilizer, NPK = 5-10-10. It's designed for crops that do best with a moderate amount of Nitrogen, & more Phosphorus & Potassium, like flowering plants & shrubs as well as crops that bloom to make their fruit like okra, melons, beans, peas, squash, tomatoes, cucumbers, sunflowers, berries, fruit orchards, and root crops like potatoes, carrots, beets, Jerusalem Artichokes, garlic etc.

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Vegetative
Abundance Blend

Vegetative Abundance fertilizer is also the result of 60 years of organic gardening experience, & many analyses of the formula by the University of Georgia Soil, Plant, and Water Laboratory, resulting in the ultimate organic fertilizer, NPK = 10-10-10, the highest to date in an organic blend. It's designed for heavy-feeders that need a lot of nitrogen like broccoli, cauliflower, kale, collard greens, lettuce, spinach, rhubarb, corn, grasses, cabbage, arugula, Swiss chard, celery, asparagus, Asian greens, cucumber, onions, non-blooming shrubs and house plants etc.
  

Community Garden

Amazing Fertilizer Ingredients that Really Work!

Learn more about how each ingredient gives your plants the boost they need. Both Blends contain these ingredients in varying amounts to meet the unique needs of different types of plants.

Living Ingredients

Mycorrhizae Fungi form symbiotic relationships with plant roots

 

Ectomycorrhizae form a network of cells throughout the outer and inner root, delivering enzymes, water, and minerals directly to the plant. This "web" of ectomychorrhizae also protects against predation and increases the stress resistance of the host plant.

The ectomycorrhizae act as extensions of the plant roots themselves, allowing them to access up to a 60-fold increase in surface area to explore for needed nutrients.

Endomycorrhizae form symbiotic relationships on the outside and the inside of the plant roots, delivering water, enzymes, and minerals directly into the individual cells of the root. 

In exchange, the endomycorrhizae receive complex sugars and carbohydrates produced by the plant through photosynthesis.

Dr. Dave's Ultimate Living Fertilzer includes millions of spores of:
4 species of Endomycorrhizae: Glomus intraradices, Glomus mosseae, Glomus aggregatum, Glomus etunicatum, and;

7 Species of Ectomycorrhizae: Rhizopogon villosulus, Rhizopogon luteolus, Rhizopogon amylopogon, Rhizopogon fulvigleba, Pisolithus tinctorius, Scleroderma cepa, and Scleroderma citrinum.

Click the links below to Learn More:

 

https://mycorrhizae.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Beneficial-Factors-4-Species-v1.2.pdf

https://mycorrhizae.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Beneficial-Factors-Ecto-Species-v1.2.pdf

Highly Beneficial Bacillus Bacteria enhances plant growth by transforming organic matter into carbon-rich food for the plants

 

These amazing bacteria  transform phosphorus, iron, and zinc into absorbable forms, produce phytohormones, and protect the plant from pathological fungi and many other pathogens.

Dr. Dave's Ultimate Living Fertilzer includes:
Bacillus megaterium, B. subtilis, B. licheniformis, B. simplex, B. pumilus, and B. amyloliquefaciens

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Plus These Vital Nutrients . . .

Nitrate Nitrogen

Nitrogen produces luxurious green vegetative growth, essential for capturing the sun's energy via photosynthesis and converting it into sugars, which then yield delicious, sweet fruit (Northeast Organic Farming Association, 2013)

Humic/Fulvic Acid

Both humic and fulvic acids are naturally occurring substances derived from organic matter. They are powerful biostimulant and soil conditioners that increase both soil and plant health. Both types of compunds provide chemical, biological, and physical benefits. Some of these benefits are increased root growth, improved aeration and drainage, increased cation exchange capacity, and increased nutrient uptake. Together, these benefits greatly increase plant health, vigor, growth, and yield. (How to Use Humic Acid for Plants, Global Garden, 11/15/19)

Sulphate of Potash (Potassium Sulphate)

Both people and plants need potassium. In plants it is essential for water uptake and for synthesizing plant sugars for use as food. It also is responsible for crop formulation and quality. Commercial bloom foods contain high amounts of potassium to promote more flowers of better quality. The link between potash and plants is clear in the promotion of bigger fruit and vegetable yields, more abundant flowers and increased plant health. Kelp and greensand are also good sources for potash. (Gardening Know How: What Is Potash: Using Potash In The Garden https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/garden-how-to/soil-fertilizers/using-potash-in-garden.htm)

Bone Meal

Adding calcium and phosphorus to your garden with bone meal gives you better tomato, zucchini, and pepper yields by preventing blossom end rot. This critical mineral also promotes new growth in roots and stems to keep your plants healthy for the full growing season. Plants need phosphorus to flower, which is why gardeners commonly use bone meal for ornamentals like roses and bulbs. An infusion around the plant's base early in the growing season leads to bigger, more plentiful blooms, and it also helps produce larger onions, potatoes, garlic, beets, and carrots. Some gardeners also apply bone meal to the base of their plants just as they are blossoming to help them set fruit. (Rural Sprout Newsletter, Dec. 12, 2019)

Kelp Meal

The ocean's garden abounds with plants rich in the elements land plants need to flourish, such as proteins, minerals, growth hormones, vitamins and enzymes. The growth hormones in kelp, such as cytokinin, aid the plant in processes like cell division and enlargement and the development of chloroplasts. Plants treated with sea kelp tend to grow stronger root systems, resulting in more abundant produce and richer foliage. Sea kelp also stimulates soil bacteria, which improves soil fertility through humus formation and aeration. In addition, plants treated with sea kelp develop a stronger resistance to disease and insect infestations, as their immune systems are supported by the additional vitamins and minerals that kelp contributes to the soil. (https://homeguides.sfgate.com/sea-kelp-plants-24537.html)

Azomite

Azomite is a highly mineralized complex silica ore mined in Utah from an ancient deposit left by a volcanic eruption that filled a small seabed an estimated 30 million years ago. According to research and customer reports, plants grown with Azomite produce more and larger fruits and vegetables per plant that are better tasting - with evidence of improved nutritional benefits. Azomite has shown these positive results in a wide variety of plants in both field and laboratory. (Azomite Mineral Products, Inc., Nephi, Utah)

Boron

Boron helps control the transport of sugars in plants. It is important to cell division, and fruit and seed development. As a micronutrient, the amount of boron in soil is minute, but among micronutrients, boron deficiency in plants is the most common. (Gardening Know How: Boron In Soil: The Affects Of Boron On Plants https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/garden-how-to/soil-fertilizers/boron-on-plants.htm, 8/28/18)

Biochar

By converting agricultural waste into a powerful soil enhancer that holds carbon and makes soils more fertile, biochar can boost food security, discourage deforestation and preserve cropland diversity. Research is now confirming benefits that include: Reduced leaching of nitrogen into ground water; Possible reduced emissions of nitrous oxide; Increased cation-exchange capacity resulting in improved soil fertililty; Moderating of soil acidity; Increased water retention; and, Increasing numbers of beneficial soil microbes. Biochar can improve almost any soil. (International Biochar Initiative)

Application Rate
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How to Apply

Important Application Rate Explained:

The amount of fertilizer needed varies according to the quality of the soil. Generally speaking, for average garden soil, one cup of fertilizer should be worked into eight feet of a three foot wide row prior to planting. If the soil is poor, up to twice that much might be needed. If the soil is excellent, half that much might be adequate. Keep in mind that this is the strongest organic fertilizer there has ever been. So it is possible to burn very small plants with it. It’s a good idea to let seedlings get two or three inches tall before giving them their first very light side dressing. Once they get about six inches tall, you can apply a little more generously, as you would with set outs as described below.

 

When setting out plants, work in the fertilizer as described above, and then stir a quarter cup into the root zone under each plant while setting them out. Mulch heavily before watering them in. Then feed the plants every three weeks. As the plant grows above ground, the roots spread out so the circle of fertilizer fed around the plant expands, and the amount of fertilizer fed increases as it’s covering an expanding root zone, feeding a larger and larger plant. You want to use about 1/8 cup of fertilizer per square foot when side dressing, every three weeks in your garden, and 2 rounded Tbsp's per gallon of soil for potted plants every 3 months.

 

Use Vegetative Abundance on all types of plants to get them established, to speed vegetative green growth. After root crops and plants that bloom to make their fruit, get half grown, start feeding those with the Root Crops and Bloomers blend to encourage blooming, fruiting, and filling out the fruit to maximum size.

 

If you follow these instructions, you will be amazed at the results.

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