Garden: 10 Best Natural Fertilizers To Do Yoursel

Revamping Your Garden: Homemade Natural Fertilizers

For a lush garden and thriving vegetable patch, fertilizer is a must. Yet, commercial chemical options not only strain your budget but also pose health and environmental risks. Opting for natural, DIY solutions is the smarter choice. Surprisingly, you likely have most ingredients on hand. When concocting infusions or manures, rainwater is preferred, and plastic containers are ideal for maceration.

Coffee Grounds:

Don’t toss your coffee grounds if you’re a caffeine enthusiast! They’re a versatile addition to your garden, suitable for planters, flower beds, and veggie patches alike. Roses, rhododendrons, magnolias, and hydrangeas especially benefit. Besides repelling pests, coffee grounds enrich the soil with organic matter, upping nitrogen levels and acidity.

Tea Bags:

Boost plant flowering and nourish veggies or fruit trees by steeping tea bags in water. This tea-infused water can then be used for watering.

Banana Peel:

Rich in potassium, phosphorus, and calcium, banana peels are a boon for plants. Simply bury a peel at the base of a plant to decompose and release nutrients. Overripe bananas can be frozen and later buried at plant bases. Alternatively, create an infusion by soaking peels for 2-3 days, then spray the resulting juice on seedlings or plants.

Epsom Salt:

With its magnesium and sulfur content, Epsom salt is a beneficial addition. Mix 1 tablespoon in 4 liters of water for watering seedlings. Tomato plants and roses particularly thrive with this treatment.

Eggshells:

Crushed eggshells around plants provide calcium. Alternatively, boil around twenty eggshells in 4 liters of water, let it infuse overnight, then filter and spray at the base of plants.

Cut Grass Infusion:

Fill a bucket with cut grass, cover with water, and leave to ferment for 3-5 days before diluting and using to fertilize plants.

Organic Compost Infusion:

Infuse organic compost in water for 3-5 days, then dilute until amber-colored for a nutrient-rich fertilizer suitable for all plants.

Nettles:

Bury nettle leaves under plants or make nettle manure by macerating nettles in water for 15 days before filtering and diluting.

Comfrey:

Use comfrey as mulch or prepare comfrey manure by mixing fresh leaves in water, letting it ferment for 1-2 weeks, then diluting.

All-Plant Manure:

Chop green plants and soak in water for a nutrient-rich fertilizer.

Wood Ashes:

Use unpainted wood ashes to create a milky liquid for watering plants.

Cooking Water:

Cool vegetable cooking water and use it to water your garden.

Feather Juice:

Soak feathers in water for several days, then use the resulting tea-colored liquid to fertilize plants without dilution. Cabbages and perennials particularly benefit.


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