The Delaware Gazette

Choose the correct fertilizer for your plants

A task of utmost impor­tance at this time of year is fer­til­iza­tion. Fer­til­iz­ing peren­ni­als in the fall instead of spring is ideal because it can be in tan­dem with prun­ing. Also with peren­ni­als’ sum­mer activ­ity fresh on the mind, it is easy to assess which plants need what kind of help. As OSU Fact­Sheet HYG 1002–96 instructs: “The best time to fer­til­ize in the north­ern United States is autumn, gen­er­ally after the first hard freeze in Octo­ber and before the soil freezes in December.”

Choos­ing the cor­rect fer­til­izer can be quite over­whelm­ing and some­times feels more like a leap of faith than an edu­cated deci­sion. After all we gar­den to relax and enjoy, not to flash­back to high school chem­istry class. 10–10-10? Fish emul­sion? 10–20-30? Nitro­gen? Manure … to grow food in? A brief sci­en­tific les­son to dis­sect the good, bad and ugly of fertilizer.

First and fore­most: the num­bers. Most prod­ucts sold as “fer­til­izer” have three num­bers some­where on the pack­ag­ing. The three num­bers are divided by dashes. Most com­monly is 10–10-10. 10 of what? Your chem­istry teacher, or OSU Fact­Sheet HYG 1002–96 would tell you, “The analy­sis or grade of a fer­til­izer refers to the min­i­mum amounts of nitro­gen (N), phos­pho­rus (as P2O5), and potas­sium (as K2O) in the fer­til­izer, and is always printed on the bag, can, or bot­tle. A 10–10-10 fer­til­izer would rep­re­sent 10 per­cent nitro­gen, 10 per­cent P2O5, and 10 per­cent K2O. There­fore, in 50 pounds of 10–10-10, there are 5 pounds of N, 5 pounds of P2O5, and 5 pounds of K2O.”

Essen­tially a 10–10-10 fer­til­izer is like a multi-vitamin. It is designed to be bal­anced, sup­ple­ment on a broad spec­trum, and improve over­all strength of a plant. Just as one takes a mul­ti­vi­t­a­min in a pre­ven­ta­tive man­ner to boost the immune sys­tem, a 10–10-10 fer­til­izer gives a plant a gen­eral boost in health and vital­ity. That is why 10–10-10s are a good place to start with fer­til­iz­ers. For plants that have per­formed well all sum­mer, recently been pruned, or plants that seemed a lit­tle lack­lus­ter this past sea­son but with no pre­cise cul­prit, a 10–10-10 is prob­a­bly the fer­til­izer to choose. For more spe­cific prob­lems, a more spe­cific fer­til­izer is in order.

I have sev­eral hydrangeas and a com­mon prob­lem for them is vig­or­ous leaf growth and little-to-no flow­er­ing. If the plant is get­ting enough sun, the prob­lem is likely an abun­dance of nitro­gen and not enough potas­sium and phos­pho­rus. This is also a com­mon prob­lem with other flow­er­ing shrubs like roses, also fruits and veg­eta­bles. More blooms on a tomato plant means more toma­toes. With­out being brand spe­cific, my favorite fer­til­izer for a prob­lem like this is an organic fish-emulsion and sea­weed fer­til­izer. As you might imag­ine, it does not smell pleas­ant but it works excep­tion­ally well. It is a 20–30-10. The 30 per­cent phos­pho­rus helps boost blooms while still being a bal­anced fer­til­izer with 20 per­cent nitro­gen and 10 per­cent potas­sium. Vig­or­ous new leaf and green growth sig­ni­fies there is ample nitro­gen, but when none of that new green growth is flow­er­ing, the 30 per­cent phos­pho­rus will help. It was with this dis­cov­ery a few years ago where I learned of another ques­tion in fer­til­izer. Organic or inor­ganic? Not in the sense of organ­i­cally grown apples vs. apples, but nat­u­rally occur­ring sub­stances vs. syn­thetic sub­stances. There are not mashed-up bananas in most fer­til­iz­ers to sup­ply potas­sium, instead there are often syn­thetic com­pounds that sup­ply potas­sium and are designed for the plant to absorb rapidly. Essen­tially this is a mat­ter of choice. Organic fer­til­iz­ers some­times take longer for the plants to absorb, but inor­ganic fer­til­iz­ers can be more likely to cause burn to the leaves if over-applied.

Con­versely, another com­mon prob­lem — plants that are abnor­mally small and diminu­tive, with lit­tle new leaf growth. This could be due to a lack of nitro­gen. Often flow­er­ing plants from the nurs­ery are loaded with bloom boost­ers of potas­sium and phos­pho­rus cre­at­ing an abnor­mal amount of blooms on a small, some­times lack­ing nitro­gen. In this instance the ideal fer­til­izer would be one where the first num­ber (that rep­re­sents nitro­gen) is the highest.

If this all makes your head spin, there is far less guess­work or poten­tial for error in just adding com­post and manure. Com­post and manure are nat­ural, bal­anced and add a tremen­dous amount of health to the soil. It is a lit­tle bit more work to mix com­post and manure into the soil around your peren­ni­als, but they will likely reward you next year with healthy, beau­ti­ful growth and blooms.

An easy way to get the ben­e­fits of com­post with the ease of spread­ing or pour­ing liq­uid fer­til­izer is com­post tea. Com­post tea cer­tainly sounds strange but gar­den­ers who make and use it swear by its results. Com­post tea is very easy to make, and just like the tea we drink is entirely cus­tomiz­able. And because every­thing is diluted by water it is fairly fool-proof. To make com­post tea all you need is com­post, a five gal­lon bucket, and water. The ratio is about 1 cup com­post to 1 gal­lon water. So for a five-gallon bucket that is 5 cups of com­post (about one shovel-full). Add water to the bucket and let steep any­where from 24–72 hours. If you are look­ing to cut that time, add some boil­ing water to raise the over­all tem­per­a­ture. The com­post will steep more rapidly in hot water.

While you can­not be com­pletely cer­tain what your soil needs with­out a soil test, which OSU Exten­sion offers for around $40, observ­ing how plants behave can pro­vide insight onto which fer­til­izer may be best. And the most impor­tant ele­ment to choos­ing fer­til­izer is know­ing what all those num­bers mean. If you would like to speak with a Mas­ter Gar­dener about nav­i­gat­ing the world of fer­til­izer, please call our Help Line at 740–833-2030, email us at mgdelco@gmail.com or visit our blog at mgdelco.blogspot.com.

Stephen Jones is an OSU Exten­sion Mas­ter Gar­dener volunteer.

Master Gardener Posted by on Oct 19 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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