Do It Yourself Homemade Plant Fertilizers
Do It Yourself Homemade Plant Fertilizers
Do It Yourself Homemade Plant Fertilizers
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"Do It Yourself Homemade Plant Fertilizers."
Making your own nutrients should be exciting. I know I get all crazy when
it comes to feeding my soil and you should too. When you uncap a bottle
of your own nutrients, or feed with one of your fresh botanical teas, you
experience a really cool feeling. That feeling is one of self-sustainability
and pride. Sometimes I catch myself talking to the plants like pets… and
feeding them better than I do myself.
I won’t get too weird on you just yet, but if your plants are spoiled like
mine are, then you and your plants will both love using homemade
nutrients. It’s like switching from Fast food to Super food!
Now it’s time to decide which is best for you: Fresh vs. Fermented
Fresh Botanical Teas:
When you want the secondary metabolites, vitamins etc. When you know
that your soil is already full of all the Major nutrients. These teas will
supplement your grow and act as a booster to plant health and vigor
without being overpowering. These typically use dried plant meals as the
main source and will have small particles of the meal present in the
water when used. Once the Botanical tea is drenched into the soil, the
microbes will go to work on the particles and left over material from your
fresh botanical tea, unlocking even more material. This method is often
used because top dressing with straight dried plant material will often
cause burning of the plant and unwanted problems, but a quick soak in
water and you can now drench the soil with the strained water.
Making a botanical tea typically involves using dried plant meal, but can
also utilize fresh growing tips of plants. The desired plant material is
then soaked for 24-72 hours and then used right away. Use of an air-
stone to bubble the water is preferred but not necessary. It’s mainly to
keep the plant material in motion, so you could always just stir it every
once in awhile. I will go into detail on the entire process soon.
Fermented Plant Extracts:
Most of the so called “organic” liquid fertilizers on the market are simply
a fermented plant extract done on a commercial level. There are several
reasons why making your own is better than buying the stuff on the
Hydro-Shop Shelves.
1. You will have a better product for pennies on the dollar.
2. You can hand select the plants being used. In that way you can make
a special FPE for almost any situation, from Veg to Flower, and in-
between.
3. You can do this all cold without adding any high heat like most of the
fertilizer companies do. Think of it like getting premium first cold
pressed Olive Oil compared to cheap chemically extracted stuff.
4. You won’t have to add any preservatives whether natural or not,
these preservatives harm the overall final product and you won’t
have to add any! Your home made FPE can sit on the shelf for up to 1
year and sometimes longer all on its own.
“FPE” or Fermented Plant Extracts are one of the purest forms of
organic fertilizer available to any gardener. The final product should
be used a dilution rates of 1:500 or 1:1000 and will be very strong.
Which Plants To Use? (This information applies to both methods)
Now that you understand the difference between Botanical Teas and
Fermented Plant extracts better I want to share some information
about the types of plant material you will want to use for your
nutrients.
Most of the plants that I prefer to use fall under the category of
Dynamic Accumulators.
Dynamic Accumulators are the heavy hitting plants that contain all of
the major nutrients in them as extracted from the soil they grew in and
the air that surrounds them. Many of these plants grow fast and when
they die, they release nutrients and nitrogen back into the soil to help
continue the cycle. Here is a list of plants and the basic nutrients they
contain within them. This list will help you in choosing what to do with
a particular plant, or in finding a plant with a particular nutrient that
you require.
Download the Free Excel Spreadsheet –Click Here!
The above table was created using Dr. Duke's Phytochemical and
Ethnobotanical Databases
Using the Above table you will start to notice right away that plants
contain very different levels of nutrients depending on what type of
plant they are.
If you are hoping to make a Fermented Plant Extract for the flowering
phase of growth what would you do?
I would probably choose Stinging Nettle, Mugwort, Dandelion, Chives
etc. because the numbers they display in the Potassium and
Phosphorus areas are off the charts. While it is important to have the
basic Macronutrients that will create larger flowers, we cannot afford
to forget about the secondary metabolites and other reasons to use a
particular plant.
Here is another website to visit that will allow you to read more into
each plant as you make a nutrient from it.
Dr. Christopher’s List of Single Plants
If you have some time today, read about Comfrey, I think you’ll be surprised
how much that single plant has to offer for human health and plant food.
Just make sure that if you grow your own, you look into the Bocking 14
comfrey cultivar that won’t take over your entire yard.
Now that you know how to identify which plant to use, how do you choose
the right part of the plant, and where do you find the plants?
Method #1:
Go on a nature walk around your house or somewhere nearby where
there is an abundant amount of fresh and wild growing native plants.
Choose an area where the plants are growing in healthy soil that way you
can have confidence that there are many nutrients in the plant tips you
end up cutting.
If you happen to notice a wild patch of Stinging Nettle, comfrey or really
any fast growing healthy plants, then you should harvest them. But you
won’t need the whole plant. You only require the fresh green tips of the
plant, the youngest and most tender part. There are several reasons to
choose the growing tips. Some say that you should use the flowers if you
want a flowering nutrient and use the green growth if you want a
vegetative nutrient. You can decide for yourself by using the spreadsheet
I linked above. In the spreadsheet you will notice a number of pages on
the bottom that you can select. In the sub-pages you will find the plant
species broken down into parts of the plant. Sometimes the roots are best
to use, sometimes the green growth is the best. Ultimately you will have
to decide for yourself and experiment with what works in your garden.
But from experience, most Korean natural farmers use the green growing
tips of the plant.
Method # 2:
Go to the grocery store and purchase some organic veggies and fruit to
use for your Fermented Plant Extracts…. This works if you live
somewhere where there aren’t many plants available immediately
around you, or in winter when it’s snowing and not many healthy young
plants are growing.
Method #3:
Grow your own Dynamic Accumulators and harvest them whenever you
want to make your nutrients. Grow them in fertile soil with plenty of
nutrients and minerals for them to use.
Method #4:
Use a dried plant meal like Kelp meal, Comfrey Meal, Alfalfa Meal, Neem
Meal etc.
Method #5: Slowly becoming my new favorite. Grow your own sprouts!
And then use the sprouts to make your FPE or Botanical Tea. Try Alfalfa
sprouts. They are awesome.
How to make a Botanical Tea
Items Needed:
5 Gallon Bucket with Lid
Fresh Pure Water
Plant Material to Soak
Optional Items:
1 or 2 Aquarium Air stones
Cheap Aquarium Pump
How to make:
Fill the bucket with 4 -5 gallons of water and toss in some plant material.
Bubble the water or stir occasionally for 3 days. You can use a botanical
tea after 24 hours if you require it. But it will only get stronger up until
around 3 days. I typically don’t want to go longer than 3 days because
without fermentation it won’t get any stronger and if fermentation is
happening, I would rather use the Fermented Plant Extract Methods.
Here is an example of a recipe that I use all the time
Alfalfa Kelp Tea
1 Cup Alfalfa Meal
½ Cup Kelp Meal
Soak for 3 days in your bucket of water and use right away at full strength on full size plants
and at ½ or ¼ strength on smaller plants. I notice an impressive boost of growth after
applying this tea even 1 time. Strain before using and toss the left over alfalfa and kelp into
your worm bin or compost pile!
How To Make Fermented Plant Extracts
1) We harvest the fast-growing leaves of plants such as comfrey, stinging
nettle, mugwort, or vegetables just before dawn, when the growing tips
are believed to have the highest concentrations of growth hormones.
That is why I also recommend using Home Grown Sprouts.
2) Dirt, insects, and other contaminants are removed by shaking or
brushing. NO WASHING. Washing will remove many of the beneficial
bacteria that we will require to get fermentation. (Use Lactobacillus
Serum if you are using sprouts or meals etc.)
3) The harvested vegetation is weighed and set aside.
4) An equal amount, or up to 2/3 more, of high quality brown sugar is
weighed out. Some will use Molasses.
5) The vegetation is finely chopped and layered with the sugar in a clean
crock or bucket.
6) The material is then weighted down with a weight or “press.” Some use
a brick, some use a black bag of water for a weight. (I don’t do this in
small fermentation batches)
7) We remove the press after 24 hours and cover the container with a
breathable, natural fabric, securing it with a large elastic band. If you
don’t have a breathable fabric then poke holes in your lid or don’t screw
the lid on all the way.
8) It is placed in a dark location. Ideal ambient temperature should be
65°–70° F.
9) After about one week, the brown, syrupy liquid that accumulates is
drained off and stored in a glass container in the refrigerator. (We
understand it can be stored this way indefinitely but choose to keep it for
1 year at the longest)
10) Fermented Plant Juice can be used as a foliar spray, diluted at about
1:500 (about one ounce to four gallons) with water and other spray
nutrients. (We use materials like fish emulsion, seaweed extract,
micronized minerals, etc.)
11) Apply foliar sprays only in the coolest parts of the day to be effective.
In the past, we’ve felt that early hours of the morning were best.
Here is an example of a Miniature Fermentation project that Patrick over
at gilcarandang.com was kind enough to blog about.
GilCarandang.com Blog info:
I have two balconies in my little urban apartment. One holds my urban
garden while the other is an eclectic mix of plants, animals, experiments
and other weird stuff I’ll talk more about later. In this space, I have limited
plants to choose from. I won’t end up with a kilogram of plant material to
work with, more like a couple grams.
But even in my small farmyard, I’ve noticed some fast-growing weeds, and
even cultivated them a little to make my “micro-extract”. These fast-
growing vines will be perfect for my growth promoter extract:
You want to select the fastest growing part of the above-ground plant – the
tips. So now I select the growing tips:
Once I’ve cut a bunch of tips, I’ll have a lot from each plant. Still nothing
compared to what you would find on a “real” farm.
Now to put them in a little container. TIP: You can find little plastic
containers pre-labelled at just about any pharmacy anywhere – specimen
jars! They make perfect mini-fermenters
Now that I have all the plant material in the container, I pulverize it a bit to
break down some of the tougher material . This step isn’t necessary but I
think it helps with extraction.
Add 1/3 part sugar, in this case molasses, the favorite sugar source of
natural farmers here in the Philippines. I didn’t measure this out, just
eyeballed it. I’m a farmer! If it’ll get the job done, it’ll work.
Now add the secret sauce. You don’t have to do this but it greatly speeds
up/enhances fermentation if you do. Add a couple drops of lactobacilli
serum. Don’t need much at all especially in a container this size
Finally, fill with water. Fill to near the top, screw the cap on but don’t seal it
as some gas will form during fermentation. Then date and name it
accordingly on the handy little label that came on the container.
This will be good for a few feedings later on when I need to fertilize and
want to add some growth promoting hormones, enzymes, etc.
You can tighten the lid when you see bubbling stop after several weeks. You
will also notice the smell as it finishes fermenting. It should smell a bit like
vinegar. That is the acid that is a byproduct of fermentation. Here’s what it
looks like after 3 weeks:
This was stored in a dark place and just left alone with the lid cracked for 3
weeks. I checked it periodically, you will see the bubbles on the sides each
time you check, signs that it is indeed fermenting. I would usually tighten
the cap and give it a shake but this isn’t necessary really. After 3 weeks
(actually a lot sooner this time, but leaving it longer doesn’t matter), you’ll
stop seeing bubbles on the sides, and the smell will be like
alcohol/vinegar/sour – the fermented smell.
There you have it, your own little mini-extract! The whole process takes 5
minutes and I end up with a great product. I’ll mix this with my homemade
fish fertilizer, and use that on the garden when I want to feed in the future.
The fish fertilizer provides the Nitrogen while this extract provides the
growth promotants. Great combination.
Here is a link to making the Fish Fertilizer
Those familiar with the Grow recipe will notice that I added water, where
the recipe doesn’t call for adding water. That’s how I adapted the recipe for
this small scale use. It will be a little more diluted than if I hadn’t added
water, but there wasn’t enough plant material to do it that way. As long as
you stick to the principles of the recipes, you can adapt them depending on
your situation, like substituting pumpkin for papaya in the bloom recipe, or
snails for fish in the fish fertilizer recipe.
Coconut Water:
I will have a whole Blog Article about coconut water. But the coconut is
basically a large seed and the liquid inside has enough growth hormones
and nutrients to support the growth of an entire baby tree… so it will
have MUCH to offer your roots and plant in the soil. I like to use freeze
dried organic coconut powder but you can easily purchase this as a young
coconut at the health food store or asian market.
Ful-Power – A liquid Humic product from Bio-Ag
This product is one of the last bottles I’ll use because making your own
isn’t exactly easy. Humic and Fulvic acids assist with the uptake of
nutrients and are the building blocks of good compost and good soil.
Using a liquid version FUL POWER from Bio-Ag you are adding an
incredible boost to the efficacy of your Tea solution.
Example of how to use these add on products:
Alfalfa Kelp Botanical Tea:
1 Cup Alfalfa Meal
½ Cup Kelp Meal
Put into a 5 gallon bucket of clean water and let bubble for 36 hours.
Once finished add:
1 cup aloe vera juice
1 cup coconut water
5 oz. Ful Power
That recipe is a WINNER!
Happy Growing,
Jeremy Silva
www.BuildASoil.com
855-877-SOIL
P.S. The ultimate goal of the No-Till Grow is to eliminate all of these
nutrients and have a soil that is full of life, but in the beginning these
recipes will serve you well. If you have questions about how to eliminate
all of your supplementary fertilizers, feel free to email me personally at
Jeremy@BuildASoil.com