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Topic:
Agriculture and food

"When the planes still swoop down and aerial spray a field in order to kill a predator insect with pesticides, we are in the Dark Ages of commerce.
~ Paul Hawken

agriculture image
Environmentally Friendly Fertilizer
AprilÊ2004
Union of Concerned Scientists
http://www.ucsusa.org/publications/greentips/404-environmentally-friendly-fertilizer.html


If you're looking to grow the perfect garden but your soil could use a bit of work, you can buy any number of fertilizers that promise to provide your soil with the nutrients it needs. But not all fertilizers are alike when it comes to environmental impact.

Many commercial fertilizers are made from ammonia, which is extracted from natural gas using a complex chemical process. This process also releases carbon dioxideÑthe heat-trapping gas primarily responsible for global warmingÑinto the atmosphere. Nitrates in the resulting fertilizers can harm both humans and marine mammals by seeping into groundwater or drinking water supplies. And, in the ultimate irony, because these fertilizers are generally very acidic, they eventually have the opposite effect of the one intended, depleting the soil of nutrients and killing healthy bacteria and other essential organisms.

Fortunately, there are environmentally friendly alternatives to chemical fertilizers you can buy in a store or make yourself. Here are some tips that can give you both healthy plants and healthy soil:

At the Garden Shop

1. Choose a plant-specific organic fertilizer designed for what you are growing. Different plants require different nutrients, even in the same garden.

2. Use slow-release organic fertilizers that nourish as they decompose in the soil. Most contain fish meal, bone meal, or blood meal derived from food-processing waste. Others include fruit and vegetable waste, kelp, and earthworm castings.

3. Apply a liquid organic fertilizer when plants are in need of a quick boost. These consist mainly of seaweed and fish-processing wastes.

4. Avoid fertilizers made from municipal sludge (also called biosolids). These are often labeled organic, but have been found to contain heavy metals and other toxic chemicals that can build up in your soil.

At Home

5. Make your own nutrient-rich soil supplement by turning food wastes you would otherwise throw in the trash into compost. An inch or so of compost added to your garden each year is often all you need to maintain healthy soil.

6. Dry some coffee grounds and scatter them around plants that need a nitrogen boost. Your local coffee shop may be willing to give you its old grounds-it never hurts to ask!

7. Provide additional calcium for your soil by spreading dried, crushed eggshells.

8. Make your own liquid fertilizer by mixing seaweed - an excellent source of potassium - and water in a container and letting it decompose for about two months. Since the resulting liquid will be concentrated, you'll need to dilute it before adding it to the soil.