Keep it green
To keep any plant healthy, you need to give it fertilizer.
Whether it is a tree, shrub, perennial, annual, vegetable, bulb or a
lawn, all these plants need nutrients to help them grow. Fertilizer
comes in a few different forms such as water soluble, organic, granular,
controlled release, and stakes.
The water soluble fertilizer is the type that is a powder that you
mix with water and then give to the plants. It can be sprayed directly
on the foliage of the plant or given to the soil, either way it instantly
feeds the plant. This type is often used for house plants, and container
plants. Because it feeds the plant instantly when you use it on outdoor
container planters such as hanging baskets, planters or vegetables grown
in pots you need to apply it every 7-10 days. I have used this type
for years and have had much success with it.
Another type of fertilizer that is often used for larger areas such
as flower beds, vegetable gardens or lawns is the granular fertilizer.
This is the dry type that is spread by either machine or hand strewn
and works it way to the plants roots. The granular fertilizer can come
in quick release or slow-release. The quick release is good to start
the garden or lawn off in spring and then the next application 3-4 weeks
later can be a slow or controlled release fertilizer. A slow release
fertilizer is one that has been coated with a resin or sulfur which
when it comes in contact with moisture will slowly break down and feed
the plant. Depending on moisture and soil conditions and can feed a
plant for as long as 3-4 months.
Granular fertilizers can also come in combination with a herbicide
such the ‘Weed n Feed’ or ‘Lawn fertilizer with Moss
Control’ and these do two jobs in one by feeding the lawn and
killing off unwanted weeds and moss. When using these combination fertilizers
you need to read the instructions carefully as weather, temperature,
and water play an important part in the success of the weed control.
Another thing to keep in mind when using Weed n Feed is to be careful
where you spread it as it will kill trees, shrubs or any other wanted
plants that it will come in contact with. It is always better to be
overcautious and keep far back from these plants as they can have an
outstretched root system and the weed killers can spread further than
you planned.
One other type of fertilizer is the organic types and these include
manure such as the steer and the one I like to use mushroom manure.
Organic fertilizers are those derived from some form of once-living
organisms. Blood meal, and bone meal are organic and so are the fish
fertilizers.
When you look at a fertilizer container you will notice that they have
3 hyphenated numbers on them. These 3 numbers indicate the amount of
Nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium it contains. The first number is
nitrogen and plants use it to form chlorophyll and increase leaf production.
High nitrogen fertilizers are used for lawns and evergreens as you want
to promote the green. The second number is phosphorus which aids in
root development and blossom and seed production.