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Fertilizing: your success and why organics?

strawchicago z5
10 years ago

The Russian GERDA23 has the best garden in HMF. She has alkaline clay, awesome garden. See link:

http://www.helpmefind.com/gardening/l.php?l=99.4875364&tab=9

I asked her how she did it, she wrote in Russian, I had to run through 4 translators. GERDA23 wrote:

"Early spring nitrate. After 7 days, 1/2 bucket of cow manure under each bush. Then double-superphosphate, ashes for micronutrients, potassium-sodium humate (80% humic acid). Two times a year top dress with chicken manure. In the fall feed roses with grass and compost.

My Sharifa Asma-2 yrs, good seedlings, blooms profusely with soluble phosphate-potassium. In spring sodium-metabisulfite for fungicide." GERDA23

***** From Strawberryhill:

GERDA is in zone 6, Russia, with alkaline clay. She uses sodium humate (80% humic acid, pH of 9 to 10). It's smart for the Russian to spread sodium humate and wood ash on surface, both very alkaline to prevent fungal diseases.

How do I adopt the Russian's regime to my climate? I already bought compost & cow manure for late fall fertilization right before the ground freezes, per U. of Illinois recommendation.

I need a jump-start for my short summer by raking in leaves, then dump alkaline soil on top. Acidic leaves or alfalfa on top would breed fungi.

Spring time I'll get cow or horse manure. After 1st and 2nd flush I'll top-dress with chicken manure. When we get into hot & dry mid-summer, I'll switch to soluble phosphorus & potassium as in grains, or very diluted MG Bloom Booster.

See below link for GERDA23 amazing Russian garden, tons of blooms, zone 6, alkaline clay.

Below is Sweet Promise hybrid tea in my garden, fertilized with horse manure and chicken manure. Picture taken during last year's drought with high heat at 100 degrees, you can see the burnt grass behind:

Here is a link that might be useful: Russian rose garden in HMF

This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Mon, Sep 30, 13 at 10:25

Comments (28)

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    Prickles (Bailey) in Antique roses forum posted a super-loaded Young Lycidas rose with 150+ blooms per spring flush. He fertilized with salmon bits and shrimp shells.

    There's more to seafood than just high phosphorus, salmon is high in B vitamins, including B12, B3, tryptophan, vitamin D, Omega-3 fatty acids .... a total of 80 nutrients.

    Can't find NPK of shrimp shell, but I found NPK of lobster shell of 4.6 / 3.52 / 0. Fresh fish has NPK 6.5 / 3.75 / 0 ... also high in phosphorus & nitrogen for blooming. Upon further research, I found that phosphorus needs nitrogen and trace-elements to maximize blooming.

    There's more to blooming than the high phosphorus number, there's trace elements, such as boron, zinc, copper, etc. Take horse manure with NPK 0.44 / 0.17 / 0.35, quite low in phosphorus but high in trace elements..

    Take leaves such as oak with NPK 0.8 / 0. 35 / 0.15. I have a few roses fertilized with leaves, I never water them for the past 6 years, and they are healthy & bloom well.

    Take Barley grain with 0.36 % of phosphorus, or oatmeal with 0.35% of phosphorus, compare to alfalfa pellets with 0.23% phosphorus. I get more blooming fertilized with soluble ground-up grains: corn meal, oats, rye, and barley. There's trace-elements, vitamins, and essential fatty acids in grains that give shiny luster to leaves.

    Take blood meal, with many amino acids. I got Mirandy as a tiny band, with 3 yellow leaves. I tried chemical nitrogen, didn't work. I tried chicken manure, didn't work. Finally I tried blood meal (has iron) ... Mirandy greened up immediately with new shoot. See amino acids profile of blood meal, amazing!

    http://www.ingredients101.com/bloodmeal.htm

    Below is a spray of Radio Times rose, fertilized with horse manure and chicken manure last spring. I counted over 40 blooms for a small 2nd-year own-root:

    Here is a link that might be useful: NPK chart of Organic fertilizers

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Fri, Sep 27, 13 at 11:17

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    Here's an excerpt from the below site "Poultry manure (chicken in particular) is the richest animal manure in N-P-K. Chicken manure is considered "hot" and must be composted before adding it to the garden. Otherwise, it will burn any plants it comes in contact with."

    http://www.plantea.com/manure.htm

    According to NC University, chicken manure has highest nutrients among manures: NPK 1.6 / 1.8 / 2.0 for dry chicken manure, and NPK of 0.9 / 0.5 / 0.5 for fresh chicken manure, vs. horse manure at 0.6 /0.3 /0.5

    I get way-more yields on my fruit trees with Lilly Miller NPK 10-5-4 with chicken manure. My fruit trees were stingy with chemical NPK 10-10-10.

    Peter Schneider in his book, "Right Roses, Right Place" ... He grows over 1,000 varieties in Ohio. He wrote how horse manure promotes Rose Midge. At first I didn't believe him, but after seeing rust and black spot with this year's new horse manure on an acidic bedding of straw and wet wood shavings .. I should not had gotten that stuff when I saw mushrooms growing in the pile.

    University of Colorado does not recommend frequent manure for hot and dry climate, due to the salt content. Chicken manure is highest in salt among all the manures, best applied in cool and wet spring.

    Found a link on why chicken manure is awesome as fertilizer: it's high in boron, zinc, and copper .... most deficient in alkaline conditions .. folks put minerals in chicken-feed. Some excerpts from link below:

    "She told me that no matter how much home-made compost or cover crops they used, they just couldn't get the growth response and production they wanted without bringing in chicken manure from one of the commercial chicken farms in the area. ....Interestingly, although the Phosphorus and Potassium levels were high, they weren't exceptional. It was the Copper, Zinc, and Boron that were through the roof.

    It turns out that commercial livestock growers and feed manufacturers are well aware of the value for minerals in the diet ... I doubt that one could find a cow pasture in the country that doesn't have a mineral block sitting out, and those aren't just 'salt blocks", they have the whole spectrum of trace minerals."

    Here is a link that might be useful: Soil minerals for Organic garden and chicken manure

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Mon, Sep 30, 13 at 10:52

  • seaweed0212
    10 years ago

    Another example of diluted own chick poo, rescue cl Don Juan $1.99 5gal back in Aug 2004. I am not kidding.

    strawchicago z5 thanked seaweed0212
  • seaweed0212
    10 years ago

    Close up shot of the cl Don Juan rose

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    Hi seaweed: WOW.... that's a lot of blooms on your Don Juan rose, and the colors look great, esp. on deep orange/yellow Honey Perfume rose. I saw Honey Perfume at the alkaline rose park nearby, the color was yellow. Most of their roses are pale, fertilized with chemical high in phosphorus.

    I tested chemical high in phosphorus on Stephen Big Purple rose, and it gave me this gaudy red color, rather than purple. See bouquet below:

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Sun, Sep 29, 13 at 13:01

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    Here's info. on trace elements of manures by University of Wisconsin:

    "Average concentrations for 87 dairy, 10 swine and 24 poultry manure samples are in Table 1. Swine and poultry manure contained similar amounts of Zn (zinc), Cu (Copper) and Mn (Manganese) and was approximately 10-100 times higher than in dairy manure ... Swine and poultry manure also contained about 10 times more Selenium than Dairy."

    Manganese is least available in my alkaline clay, rather than iron. Chicken manure turned a multiflora rose from bronzy-yellow chlorosis into dark-green and lots of blooms.

    Unfortunately that chicken manure was in Lilly Miller 10-5-4, with added sulfur, and chemical nitrogen (high salt). High nitrogen increases soft growth in plant tissue, attracting aphids and mites. The RRD mites don't have penetrating mouth-piece, but they can invade easier if the tissue is made soft with excess nitrogen and acid-fertilizer.

    I made the mistake of applying that stuff the 2nd time in hot June ... Last year we had a drought, that rose came down with RRD. It was next to a tree. I learn my lesson to use dry chicken manure alone, NPK 1.6 / 1.8 / 2.0, less salt.

    See Grandma's Blessing rose before it came down with RRD. That's the only rose with RRD in my garden.

    Here is a link that might be useful: University of Wisconsin and trace elements in manures

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Mon, Sep 30, 13 at 11:15

  • JessicaBe
    10 years ago

    Have you used Mills Magic Rose Mix on your roses or know anything about it?

    Here is a link that might be useful: Mills Magic Rose Mix

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    Hi Jessica: Thank you for the above link. Karl Bapst gave this recipe for Mills Magic Rose Mix:

    "Equal amounts of Alfalfa Meal, Fish Meal, Cottonseed Meal, Blood Meal, Bone meal, Milorganite or an activated sewage sludge." Karl Bapst

    Mills Magic Mix with fish meal is rich in nutrients, except it's best for sandy or loamy soil, but not for heavy clay. The salt in sewage sludge are not good for clay soil (already high in salt).

    Bone meal as a source of phosphorus doesn't travel down much in heavy clay. One study showed that phosphorus moved maximum of 1 inch per year, and much less for heavy clay. Bone meal can't be utilized when the pH is above 7, according to U. of Colorado Extension.

    Someone in the Roses Forum reported killing a dozen of her roses by fertilizing with Mills Magic Mix every month. I got curious and looked up the ingredients: it has sewage sludge (bio-solids), which is high in salt. If you have clay soil, it's best to choose less salt organics. Diane in Southwest Idaho (dry & alkaline clay) has good results with Rose-Tone.

    I once posted a thread comparing the ingredients of Lily Miller for Roses and Rose-Tone: Rose-Tone is lower-in salt, less chemical. Both Lily Miller and Rose-Tone has dry-chicken manure. Dry chicken-manure is cheap & effective and sold everywhere. I used that last year and my roses were much healthier than this year with my chemical experiments.

    I like organics since it's lower in salt ... the salt in chemical fertilizer can destroy soil microbes necessary for nitrogen-fixation, and the suppressing of pathogenic fungi. Roses do best with frequent, but low-dose fertilizer as in manures. Below is Marie Pavie, fertilized with horse manure (on wood-chips bedding) mixed with alfalfa meal:

  • JessicaBe
    10 years ago

    Thanks Strawberry! I don't think I have clay soil but it can become packed and hard to dig but its also loose.

    Bio sludge sounds toxic and not good for anything!

    Fertilizing with so which do you like better Lilly's or rose tone?

    Composted chicken poo is expensive where I found it.

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    Hi Jessica: Here's the ingredients in Lilly Miller for roses: Chicken manure, alfalfa meal, ammonium sulfate, ammonium phosphate, sulfate of potash, calcium and sodium borate, Ferrous, Manganese and zinc oxides, sodium molybdate. NPK 5-8-4, with 4% calcium, 4% sulfur, and 0.1% iron.

    Here's the ingredients in RoseTone: Feather meal, chicken manure, cocoa meal, bone meal, aflafa meal, green sand, humates, sulfate of potash, plus beneficial bacteria. NPK 4-3-2. Personally I think Epsoma Tomatoe tone at NPK 3-4-6 is better for roses: more of potassium via greensand, plus more phosphorus for alkaline clay.

    Jessica, it depends on your soil. My soil is rock-hard alkaline clay, pH 7.7, with phosphorus deficiency, so I prefer Lily Miller with trace elements to sprinkle on top. I had bad luck using Jobes Organics with bone meal, the bone meal gunked up on top, and burnt my Deep Purple rose.

    For the planting hole, I prefer Jobes Organics (bone meal & beneficial microbes NPK 2-7-4). I used RoseTone in the planting hole and its NPK 4-3-2 is mild, no burning whatsoever. Phosphorus mobility is a 1, doesn't move much, so bone meal high in phosphorus is best in the planting hole.

    I once posted a thread in Antique Roses forum entitled: "RoseTone, greensand, kelp, and sulfate of potash" ... here are some useful info. regarding organic sources of potassium:

    â¢Posted by plantloverkat 9a north Houston (My Page) on
    Wed, Apr 18, 12 at 12:23

    "Strawberryhill, my soil also tests "very low" in potassium. I have used greensand when I prepare new beds. Here, some stores will sell a 40 pound bag for about the same price as the tiny 5 pound bags sold elsewhere. Just recently, I saw granite dust (40 LB. bag) being sold for the very first time. It is also on your list of sources of potassium.

    I have used kelp meal also. I have just scattered it on the surface and watered it in. It does leave a lingering kelp odor for several days." PlantloverKat in Houston, TX

    **** From Straw: I saw Alaska dry fish fertilizer at Menards $7 for a 3 lb. bag, with NPK 4-6-6. It has alfalfa meal, fish meal, cottonseedmeal, and kelp meal. Then I saw a bag of chicken manure, 25 lbs. for $8.99, with NPK 5-3-2.5

    I chose Chickity-Do-Do manure since it's cheaper,, although stinkier. Lowe's also sells chicken manure for $3.99 for a smaller bag, and HomeDepot sells the same brand of chicken-manure. I'll put chicken manure for fall-fertilization before the ground freeze in Thanksgiving, then cover with dirt to winterize my roses in zone 5a.

    Below link is a previous thread that I posted on organic sources of potassium:

    Here is a link that might be useful: RoseTone, greensand, kelp, and sulfate of potash

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Wed, May 14, 14 at 10:01

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    I spent hours researching why chemical phosphorus is bad for plant, and found that little is utilized by plants, the rest is quickly bound up with soil elements (calcium or magnesium) under alkaline conditions.

    Superphosphate has a higher % of sulfur, and can be utilized by plants ... unfortunately I can't find that stuff. Triple-superphosphate is widely available, Hi-Yield product is triple-superphosphate, has less % of sulfur, and less utilized under alkaline conditions.

    Here's an excerpt from the link below, by Malcolm Beck:

    "When I started farming in the mid 50s, South East of San Antonio, The Texas A&M Ag and animal experts both recommended using super phosphate (0-20-0) or bone meal. Tests showed the soil low in phosphorus. Their recommendations proved beneficial to the plants and the grazing animals.

    Then, some time during the 70s lawns, shrubs, trees, vegetables and flowers in San Antonio started yellowing from the lack of micronutrients. The problem was found to be iron, zinc and manganese being tied up by phosphate. The extension service started putting out bulletins telling everyone to stop using phosphate.

    I never experienced these problems. But then, I had never used the new triple super phosphate that was now on the market. I asked one of the agricultural extension agents if the new 0-46-0 triple super phosphate could be causing all the problems .....

    To make 0-20-0, rock phosphate is treated with sulfuric acid to make calcium phosphate (0-20-0) and calcium sulphate (gypsum); these are two natural products that seldom caused any problems.

    To make 0-46-0, rock phosphate is treated with phosphoric acid. With this, much higher phosphate content, much higher N-P-K fertilizer formulas can be made. Less needs to be used. And it sells for a higher price with much better profits. " Malcolm Beck, Texas.

    **** From Straw: I have the same problem as Malcolm Beck when I put triple super-phosphate in the planting hole , roses are still pale with chlorosis! Soluble triple-super-phosphate DID NOT green up roses either.... what greened up my roses were solubles with sulfur, either gypsum (calcium sulfate), or sulfate of potash (potassium sulfate).

    Here is a link that might be useful: The hidden truth about commercial fertilizers

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Sun, Dec 8, 13 at 13:18

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    I had been using Scott's weed & feed for dandelions on my lawn for the past decade. I didn't realize how bad it was until Organic Gardening posted a petition to ban 2,4-D (it's a herbicide), which increased cancer, see below from eHow:

    "Scotts Weed and Feed uses a combination of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and 2-(2-Methyl-4-chlorophenoxy)propionic acid (mecoprop) for weed control. While 2,4-D breaks down relatively quickly, having a half-life of seven to 10 days, the slower-acting mecoprop may remain active for two months or more and is water soluble, making it a groundwater contamination risk, according to the Extension Toxicology Network

    http://www.ehow.com/list_7587788_ingredients-scotts-weed-feed.html#ixzz2qfvqknqx

    Another excerpt from link below: "Pesticides in weed and feed also end up inside. A study found that the 2,4-D levels inside homes were about ten times higher after it was applied to the lawn than before application."

    http://www.co.thurston.wa.us/health/ehcsg/weed_feed.html

    The cancer report is alarming for the herbicide 2,4-D, see below:

    "The lawn pesticides, mancozeb and chlorothalonil have been classified by the EPA as "probable" cancer causing chemicals in humans, as they have been found to cause cancer in animals. Mancozeb has also been found to react with sunlight to form a new compound the EPA categorizes as a "known" human carcinogen.

    The common lawn pesticide 2,4-D has been shown to increase the risk of lymphatic cancer in farmers six times the normal rate, according to a National Cancer Institute report.

    Scientists believe that the use of lawn chemicals such as 2,4-D has been a significant factor in the 50% rise in non-HodgkinâÂÂs lymphoma over the past 20 years in the American population. (World health Organization. 2,4-D Environmental Aspects. Geneva, Switzerland, 1989.)

    Here is a link that might be useful: Pesticides and cancer

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Fri, Jan 17, 14 at 13:36

  • vabyvlue
    9 years ago

    Do you guys use milky spore for Japanese beetle larvae?

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    Hi vabyvlue: I checked into milky spores in the past, and after reading U. of Illinois Extension of the many variables which impede the success of milky spores, I decided against it. Some of the variables are:

    " Ingestion of the bacteria does not always produce infection as spores may pass through the gut and be discharged with fecal matter ... In the 1980s, it turned out that a different but related bacteria was actually being produced, which had little activity on Japanese beetle grubs. As a result, products were withdrawn from the marketplace."

    "Successful use of milky spore disease requires attention to environmental conditions, including temperature, moisture, soil structure, pH, and soil type. Efficacy of the disease may vary in cold temperatures; the spores are very cold-sensitive."

    Second, milky spore affects only one species of white grubs; and, in some situations, the Japanese beetle may not be the only or the predominant species. Third, results may take several seasons, 3 to 5 years in cooler climates, so several years may lapse before adequate control of grubs is achieved. "

    *** From Straw: U. of Illinois also cited the cost-prohibitive factor of milky spore. So for the fast years I spent my money feeding the birds. Birds are fast with eating the grubs.

    I also did extensive research on the pros & cons of JB-traps. I tested one method of setting the traps FAR AWAY from my rose garden to trap beetles, then stomping on the bag with my feet, and dumping zillion of dead beetles out to feed the birds. It reduced my JB-infestation to less than 10 a day, which I can kill easily with my fingers.

    Here is a link that might be useful: U. of Illinois Extension on milky spores

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Fri, May 2, 14 at 10:42

  • vabyvlue
    9 years ago

    Thanks! I've always stayed away from JB traps b/c I've heard that you'll attract more than your fair share but I might give them a try.

    BTW, I'm going to try watering with molasses to enhance the pink color in roses. When do you begin watering with molasses? Once the plant sets buds? How often? Do you use powder or liquid molasses?

    thanks again!

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    Hi vabyvlue: Blackstrap molasses are high in potassium, calcium, and iron ... NPK of molasses is 3-1-5. I feed roses molasses when they develop tiny buds. Here's my rating of liquid molasses (edible for humans, with no preservative):

    The molasses I used in my pots experiment was Brer Rabbit, inferior brand with 30 mg sodium, 10% potassium, 2% calcium, and 6% iron. I DON'T RECOMMEND THIS.

    Much better-tasting for plants & recipes is Wholesome Organic Molasses, highest at 20% potassium (730 mg), 15% iron, 15% calcium, 0 sodium, and 10% B6. It's thicker than Plantation Molasses (600 mg) of potassium, 20% calcium, and 10 mg of sodium.

    Tree of Life brand has 15 mg of sodium, 500 potassium, 20% iron .... That's the one that gave brownish spots on Gina's Rose. Could be from the high iron .. not impressed with the result.

    Conclusion: Wholesome Organic Molasses is thickest so you'll get your money's worth. It has zero salt, and highest in potassium (730 mg), plus vitamin B6. It's sold for $6 per 16 fl. oz., one dollar more than Plantation brand at $5.

    Health food aisle in local grocery store has both. The rose grower Seaweed in CA doesn't use molasses, but she uses compost (high in potassium & trace elements), plus chicken-manure (has trace elements), and her blooms are deep pink.

    But I can't add more compost to my over-flowing ground, so molasses is a cheaper alternative for potassium, calcium, iron and trace elements. How often, and what dose for molasses with NPK 3-1-5 (potassium of 5)?

    In U. of Kentucky research on Organic Fertilizers & Composts in tomato and pepper seedlings. Their conclusion: Fish emulsion NPK 5-1-1 and Omega 6-6-6 (blood meal, bone meal, sulfate of potash) are effective fertilizers, coming second to chemical fertilizer with higher nutrients NPK 20-10-20. High nitrogen was used due to leaching out from pots.

    The best growth was achieved by using Peter's 20-10-20 at 1/2 teaspoon per gallon of water, 3 times a week. This was done in pots & greenhouse environment.

    Since it's best to water roses in-ground only once a week, I would use 1 Tablespoon of molasses per 2-gallon of water, once the tiny buds are seen. Keep doing that until the blooms are done. Then start again when the buds are really tiny.

    Below is a link that lists the vitamins and trace elements in blackstrap molasses.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Blackstrap molasses nutritional profile

    This post was edited by Strawberryhill on Sat, May 3, 14 at 13:39

  • vabyvlue
    9 years ago

    Thank you very much for your words of wisdom! I'm going to try watering down my pink roses with molasses! :)

  • vabyvlue
    9 years ago

    Strawberryhill,

    I got my sulfate of potash from kelp4less. How much do I use for a 2 gallon watering can? How frequently?

    Thank you!

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    Hi vabyvlue: Thanks for a great question!

    Most municipals add quicklime (calcium oxide) to tap water to prevent corrosion of pipes. According to Wikipedia, quicklime is made by heating limestone to above 1, 517 F degree, to produce a VERY UNSTABLE product. Calcium oxide is a key ingredient for making cement.

    That's why my roses watered with tap water, have this calcified "concrete" soil on top, which I have to poke holes frequently. My tap water pH is over 8, very alkaline.

    Potassium chloride, with salt index of 116.2, is used to soften HARD water. Sulfate of potash NPK 0-0-50 has a lower salt index, at 43, high potassium, plus 23% sulfur. The sulfur part will offset the calcium hydroxide in tap water.

    How much to use for 2-gallon, and how frequently? In U. of Kentucky experiment with vegetable seedlings, organic Omega 6-6-6 (blood meal, bone meal, and sulfate of potash) BEAT Fish emulsion performance. The chart for increase in dry weight showed for tomato seedlings: 332 increase with fish emulsion, 502 increase with Omega, and 732 with chemical 20-10-20.

    Chemical has the upper edge in pots, due to high nitrogen, with that leaching out of pots. But high chemical nitrogen isn't good for plants in-ground, due to accumulation of salt. Plus the bacteria in soil & compost can fix nitrogen for plants.

    Peter's NPK 20-10-20 has sulfate of potash at 20, is used at 1/2 teaspoon per gallon at 3 times a week .. but that's for pots that leach out nutrients. Kelp4Less sulfate of potash NPK is 0-0-50, more than double, I would use only 1 teaspoon per week mixed with 2 gallon of water.

    That would offset the calcium hydroxide in tap water. I used sulfate of potash last fall, with IMMEDIATE dark-green & glossy leaves, and tons of buds. See link below for U. of Kentucky experiment, you see how big the seedlings & dark green leaves with chemical 20-10-20 (sulfate of potash at 20) ... next best is package manure (cow manure), then worm casting, and worst is thoroughbred horse manure (tiny yellowish plants).

    Here is a link that might be useful: U. of Kentucky organics and vegetable seedlings

  • vabyvlue
    9 years ago

    Great information! Thank you!! :)

    strawchicago z5 thanked vabyvlue
  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    Re-post GERDA23 from Russia zone 6b formula: "Early spring nitrate. After 7 days, 1/2 bucket of cow manure under each bush. Then double-superphosphate, ashes for micronutrients, potassium-sodium humate (80% humic acid). Two times a year top dress with chicken manure. In the fall feed roses with grass and compost."

    Her garden is fantastic, the most blooms ever on Austin roses, she has slightly alkaline loamy soil with pink hydrangea:

    http://www.helpmefind.com/gardening/l.php?l=99.4875364&tab=9

    My alkaline soil is heavier than GERDA23, but I agree with her formula. My best year of blooming was when I used NPK 10-5-4 in early spring (double nitrogen). Yes to cow-manure or horse manure early spring for phosphorus that encourages root-growth and more branching (if your soil is tested less available like mine). Extremely alkaline wood-ash for trace elements & potassium ... that will be neutralized by acidic rain. I don't have wood ash so I use red-lava-rock, plus pea gravel as buffers against acidic rain.

    Two times a year top-dress with chicken manure. Yes, chicken manure is highest in zinc, copper, and boron ... all 3 are needed for blooming and all 3 are anti-fungal agents. In the fall feed roses with grass (she means alfalfa hay): that to keep the moisture in, plus compost for thick & protective layers plus winterization.

    Woodchips, alfalfa hay, cracked corn, and gypsum helped the hole of Tchaikosky to be moist & fluffy. Here's my 1st bloom of Tchaikosky, very big & bloomed less than a month after being bought end of June:

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    Wood chips help to retain water & makes soil loamy for best root-growth. The below video showed how giant dinosaur kale was grown on just decayed wood-chips and rock dust (Azomite) alone. I would not believe this video ... if I didn't test Azomite. I tested Azomite on Marie Pavie, Radio Times, Crown Princess Magareta in July: no other fertilizer was used on them after early spring: amazing growth spurt, more balanced than blood meal alone, since blooms come along too. Heirloom roses recommend mixing soil with 1/2 woodchips to make it fluffy for roses' roots. With fertilizer, less is best, and just a tiny bit of Azomite was enough for BIG growth spurt. The 1st 4 blooms of Tchaikosky were huge: it has woodchips & alfalfa hay for water-retention. This video reminds me that I DID put woodchips in that hole (per Heirloom's recommendation), so I will get more free woodchip just to LAYER with heavy clay. That works better than mixing in, that tends to glue up.

  • Samuel Adirondack NY 4b5a
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    I have to say that picture of honey perfume is the most magical color in a while.

    Elaine Ingham uses the molasses in the aerated compost tea recipe to get more fungal dominant biology.

    I think the molasses in the soil helps feed the mycorrhiza fungi.

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    8 years ago

    You are right, Sam. When I took microbiology in college, we tested yeast (a type of fungi) in different solutions. Tremendous increase in growth when we put sugar in the medium. Info. from below link: "Yeasts are, of course, among the most important fungi, because they raise bread, ferment sugars to make beer, wine, and spirits, and represent a concentrated food and a source of B vitamins." http://www.mycolog.com/yeasts.htm

    I make homemade bread, and the recipe always call for a teaspoon of sugar or honey in the yeast solution to activate the yeast.

  • Samuel Adirondack NY 4b5a
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    For the Lupines. It's taking longer for the roots to get the bacteria they need. I think they need the fungi too, but more a certain type of bacteria. The plant has exudates that feed which type of organisms it wants to live and work with and who surrounds the roots.

    Thomas Affleck in Pennsylvania is going through his new situation right now building the organisms he wants to live and work with.

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    4 years ago

    Bump up this thread. Bagged compost from Menards $2 for 40 lb. works better in the planting hole FOR TOMATO than Tomato-Tone. But topdressing compost on roses WAS NOT impressive like top-dressing roses with Rose-Tone or Tomato-tone (higher potassium). Tomato Tone was great ON TOP of pots for roses.

  • strawchicago z5
    Original Author
    3 years ago

    Soil chemistry and fertilizer play a factor in attracting pests. In my 45 years of growing tomatoes, the only year that I had tomato worms was when my toddler sprinkled tons of chemical fertilizer NPK 10-10-10. But I had ZERO tomato worms in decades of using compost.

    I don't have thrips with roses in the ground, but I do have thrips with roses grown in pots & using MG-soluble for roses NPK 18-24-21. High phosphorus attract pests vs. high potassium thickens plants' tissue & guards against pests. Another time I used high phosphorus granular fertilizer on 2 roses ... ONLY those 2 got thrips. I grow 134 varieties of own-root roses.

    Re-post the info. I gave to Diane in AL, who lost her roses to RRD:

    dianela7bnorthal I'm very sorry for the loss of your roses due to RRD. We cold-zoners also lose lots of roses through winter. I lost near $2,000 from countless roses dying through my zone 5a winter over the last 3 decades. Niels in Denmark (poster way back in early 2000) .. lost 1/3 of his 400+ roses one winter. Seil in Michigan, zone 6, lost dozens of roses one winter. And Carol (rosecanadian) lost several dozens in recent winter.

    Many trees in my neighborhood died from freezing rain in winter, so I don't feel too bad.

    In my 30+ years of growing roses, the only time I had RRD was a hot & dry spring in 2012, and I over-dosed on ACID FERTILIZER Lilly Miller NPK 10-5-4. It was Grandma's Blessing rose, bred by Ping. No rain, plus pH 9 tap water turned it pale. So I dumped acid-fertilizer Lily Miller to correct sulfur deficiency. It bloomed lots !!

    The BIGGEST MISTAKE I made was to give another dose of SALTY & high nitrogen plus ACIDIC NPK 10-5-4 for 2nd flush. It could not handle the salt nor the acidity in hot summer, and came down with RRD. First case of RRD ever in 2012. I dug it up, and ZERO RRD ever since.

    Decades ago I did not have any RRD in my last house of acidic clay (blue hydrangea), but I had less roses back then and was very generous with watering (everyday in summer). Cantigny rose park (1,200 roses) is nearby, I visited that park frequently for over 20 years. I NEVER SEE RRD in Cantigny rose (alkaline clay), except in 2016 they sprinkled acidic sulfur granules on the ground in spring. Their Tamora bed became blackspot fest. ONLY ONE of their many Pink Traviatas (French Meilland rose) came down with RRD, and that particular rose got the most whitish ACIDIC sulfur granules sprinkled around it. It was a hot & dry spring.

    Cantigny park also uses high-phosphorus fertilizer for tons-of-blooms display. Too much phosphorus suppress potassium (protecting plants from diseases and pests). Phosphorus accumulates in soil and burns roses, esp. after blooming in hot & dry weather. Cantigny park got rid of ALL their 1,200 roses thanks to blackspot-fest with high phosphorus usage. In contrast, Chicago Botanical Garden (5,000 roses) is still there, thanks to their using SOLUBLE fertilizer only 3 times a year at NPK 20-20-20.

    CONCLUSION: high potassium thickens plants tissue. High phosphorus induces more branching & more soft-tissue for pests to attack. High nitrogen is high in salt & attract pest. My healthiest tomatoes and roses have organic-slow-released nitrogen and high potassium. The worst roses with thin stems & blackspots have high phosphorus in the planting hole.

    Still remember Bellagallica in PNW reported that rose park in high rain & cool weather PNW uses animal manure ONLY IN SPRING TIME, and nothing afterwards. Chicken manure is cheap & high in phosphorus, and it's in Rose tone & all fertilizers. Val from Rose Petals Nursery in FL gave me a link to University of Florida on phosphorus: stockpiled chicken manure has 10 times more phosphorus than nitrogen, so if the label says NPK 5-3-2, it's actually NPK 5-30-2, exceedingly high in phosphorus at 30, fantastic in attracting pests, be it thrips, midge, or RRD mite. Phosphorus burns plants at high dose in hot & dry, same with high-salt nitrogen fertilizer .. make any plant more susceptible to pests.

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