RE: Soil Ammendment Questions
- Subject: RE: Soil Ammendment Questions
- From: &* M* <j*@martinlandco.com>
- Date: Mon, 23 Apr 2007 11:35:11 -0700
- List-archive: <http://www.hort.net/lists/pumpkins/> (Web Archive)
Here's an easy formula that was on a fold up card A&L handed out at one
of the seminars:
Recommended lbs per 1000 SQ ft divided by the fertilizer number
multiplied by 100 equals lbs of fert per 1000 SF
Example:
Jordan wants 5 lbs N per 1000 SF. He can get 46-0-0 from his coop.
5/46 x 100 = 10.87 lbs of 46-0-0 per 1000 SF.
Jim Martin
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-pumpkins@hort.net [o*@hort.net] On Behalf
Of Don Chambers
Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2007 8:26 AM
To: pumpkins@hort.net; jordan.rivington@gmail.com
Subject: Re: Soil Ammendment Questions
Jordan,
The heavy hitters told me to either disperse 3-5 lbs. of Calcium Nitrate
or
5 lbs. of bloodmeal within a 6-10 ft. circle around the plant. I presume
that means the radius would be 6-10 ft. Therefore the formula is
A=(pi)r(squared)
A=3.1416 x 10 squared; A= 3.1416 x 100=314.16 or A=3.1416 x 6=113
So spread either of these between 113 to 314 sq.ft. around the
transplant
area. I use 5 # per 100 sq.ft. of blood meal or 3# of calcium nitrate
per
100 sq. ft. Blood meal is slow release and shouldn't burn the plant at
the
rates I've recommended.I was a little off suggesting 100 sq.ft. as the
area
but one heavy hitter I know does the 5 lbs. over a 100 sq.ft. area but
be
careful as his soil may be different and N requirements may be way
different. The earlier dierection would probably be safer, although you
do
need some N. The reason they suggest that 5#/1000 sq. ft. is that they
mean
5 lbs. of pure N. If you used urea which is very strong at 46-0-0 you
would
need like 10# of it over a 1000 sq.ft. area since it is 46% N. Bloodmeal
is
12-0-0 so you would need about 4x as much as the urea so about 40 lbs.
per
1000 sq. ft. or about 4 lbs. per 100 sq.ft. around the transplant area.
That
area is where you really need it when the plant starts to run from the 4
leaf stage to about an 8 ft. plant. N leaches quickly from the soil as P
and
K don't. If you spread it over the whole patch it may leach some before
the
plant really gets to use it and also you don't want much N after the 8
ft
vining stage. I personally don't spread it past the 10' radius around
the
transplant. I cant remember what % N there is in Ca Nitrate. Hope
this
helps. Don
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jordan Rivington" <jordan.rivington@gmail.com>
To: <pumpkins@hort.net>
Sent: Saturday, April 21, 2007 9:45 AM
Subject: Re: Soil Ammendment Questions
> Do you mean 1000 sqft? The recommendations said 5 lbs per 1000, not
100.
> Just want to make sure. 10 times the needed N would be a problem (not
saying
> you are wrong, just that 10x would be bad). Vigoro has some 12-0-0
> bloodmeal, and bonemeal 1-11-0, would these be fine for that? As for
the
two
> weeks, I suppose I could just put in in most of the garden (except
where I
> am starting the plants) since I want to plant next weekend. Should
they be
> tilled in, or is spreading and watering enough?
>
> Thanks
>
>
> On 4/21/07, Don Chambers <dec@stratuswave.net> wrote:
> >
> > Jordan,
> > Growers I've talked to add about 3-5 lbs.of granular Calcium Nitrate
100
> > sq.
> > ft. around the growing area. Rake it in the existing soil, it will
help
> > boost the young plant even when the soil is still cold. Bloodmeal at
about
> > 4#/100 sq.ft. is an alternative, incorporate it 2-4 weeks before
planting
> > as
> > it is slow release, that's would be plenty of nitro. I always apply
rock
> > phosphate for phosphorus at about 25#/1000 sq.ft., that would be
enough
at
> > once. You don't need potash but if you did use greensand 25#/1000
sq.ft.
> >
> > Chriss,
> > Potash is potassium. Don
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "chriss" <chriss@columbus.rr.com>
> > To: <pumpkins@hort.net>
> > Sent: Friday, April 20, 2007 11:09 PM
> > Subject: Re: Soil Ammendment Questions
> >
> >
> > > I went to buy my soil amendment supplies today, I need sulfur,
lots of
> > it
> > > and I need potassium. All I could find was potash, is that the
same
> > thing?
> > > Chriss
> > >
> > >
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