RE: Potash
Hello,
Regarding wood ash... How safe is it to use wood ash from pressure
treated wood?
Are the chemicals used to preserve the wood destroyed by heat and fire?
I don't make a habit of buring this stuff, but a piece of scrap wood will
sometimes make it into the fire pit.
Any thoughts?
Regards,
Tom
--
Thomas Olenio
Ontario, Hardiness Zone 6a
On Mon, 3 Jul 2000, Pumpkinguys wrote:
> Wood ashes are also high in potash. I sprinkle them on my compost pile all
> winter long (after the embers have died out; it's no fun to burn your
> compost pile to the ground).
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-pumpkins@mallorn.com [o*@mallorn.com]On
> Behalf Of Tom Olenio
> Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2000 11:14 AM
> To: pumpkins@mallorn.com
> Subject: Re: Potash
>
>
> Hello,
> Here is a quote that may be useful to you...
>
> "Some organic fertilizers are high in one of the three major nutrients
> (nitrogen, phosphorus, or potash,) but low or zero in the other two. Some
> are low in all three macronutrients. A few organic products can be purchased
> "fortified" for a higher nutrient analysis. The ingredients used to fortify
> organic fertilizers are organic materials; for example, rock phosphate to
> increase phosphorus, or greensand to increase potash."
>
> So that is one "organic" source for potash.
>
> Regards,
> Tom
>
> Zilclout@aol.com wrote:
>
> Can anyone suggest a fertilizer high in potash or a good source of
> potash?
> Thanks!
> Liz
> Minnetrista, MN
>
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> --
> Thomas Olenio
> Ontario, Canada
> Hardiness Zone 6a
>
>
>
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