
Do you ever feel alone when trying
to discuss fertilizer needs or pH test results
with non-organic gardeners? Well, it is difficult.
How do you interpret soil needs organically, from
charts that were designed for synthetic gardeners?
Here is one suggestion. Let's assume that a
traditional soil test suggests that you need to
add 50 lb of a 12-4-8 customized
synthetic fertilizer to your soil to raise the
classic NPK needs. You as an organic gardener
don't want to deal with the synthetic fertilizers,
but you want to build up your available soluble
nutrients in your soil. Also since you are an
organic gardener, you don't have to be so precise
in your NPK calculations, because your soil
amendments have plenty of OM in it and you are
depending on the soil microherd to break down and
supply the available soluble nutrients that your
plants need from the existing soil and your new
amendments. Also keep in mind that the normal P
and K recordings usually are only the available
soluble portions of P and K in the products, not
the total portions of P and K. Not to mention all
the trace elements in your natural soil amendments
that the tradition gardeners forget about. What do
you do?
CASE 1: Let's say
you want to fulfill the basic N needs with
blood meal (14-0-0), the P needs
with bone meal (1-11-0), and the
K needs with greensand (0-0-7).
That means at least 14% of blood meal contains
your N, approx. 11% of bone meal is your P, and
approx. 7% of your greensand is K. Now to get
close to 50lb of a 12-4-8 fertilizer, you need to
first calculate how many pounds of NPK is in 50
lbs of 12-4-8. That would be:
50x.12 = 6lb of N. 50x.04= 2lb of
P. 50x.08= 4lb of K. Now how much
of blood meal, bone meal, and greensand does it
take to equal the above amounts of NPK in lbs?
That would be for blood meal: 6lb
/(.14 N) = 42.8 lb. That would be for bone
meal: 2lb /(.11 P) = 18.2 lb. That would be
for greensand meal: 4lb /(.07 K) = 57.1 lb.
Therefore 42.8 lb of blood meal for
N, 18.2 lb of bone meal for P, and 57.1 lb of
greensand for K, is approx. the same for NPK
levels as 50 lb of 12-4-8 synthetic fertilizer.
CASE 2: How would
you do the above translation with just homemade
compost? Assuming most compost is between
1-1-1 and 4-4-4, let's go with an
average 2-2-2 (that's 2%N, 2%P,
2%K). To get the same NPK levels as above
for 50 lb of 12-4-8, here's a suggestion.
Since the 3 NPK numbers are the same for this
compost example, let's calculate the largest
number of the synthetic NPK, which is the 12%N
portion of 12-4-8. (6lb of 12-4-8 of
N) / (.02 N in compost) = at least 300 lb of
compost needed to satisfy the soil test
recommendation of NPK levels of 50 lb of 12-4-8
synthetic fertilizer. Of course these are just
simple examples to help explain the vast
differences in measurements between non-organic
and organic gardeners. Unlike synthetic
fertilizers that only stay in the soil for 1-3
months, compost keeps on working and breaking down
for years, even decades! The real truth is
that constant year round composting, green
manuring, and occasional natural foliar feeds like
compost tea, should handle all your plant nutrient
needs without being exact. Happy Gardening!
Source: www.gardenweb.com |