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    What's this?
Animal-free fertilizers for your healthy home garden
Compost, liquid herbal infusions, seaweed, nitrogen fixers and mulching are animal-free and great for soil enhancement.

By

Networx.com
Tue, Jul 03 2012 at 2:57 PM

Related Topics:

Vegetarianism & Veganism, Sustainable Gardening
dandelions and clover

GARDEN HELPERS: Dandelions are full of important minerals and are ideal for infusions, and clover is a "nitrogen fixer." (Photo: Susan E Adams/Flickr)

Did you know that many of the traditional organic fertilizers for hobby home gardeners, for professional landscapers and for large-scale commercial farmers are derived from animals and their by-products? Blood meal, bone meal, manure, fish emulsion, the list goes on and on. Animal parts can pop up in almost every phase of a standard growing season, so much so that using them can almost seem unavoidable.
 
But these days, a lot of people are choosing to grow their gardens without the addition of animal products, and for many reasons: They may be vegan or have an ethical objection, they may have religious limitations or they may have allergies, just to name a few. In water-strapped communities that are over-tapped by local plumbing demands, like San Diego, non-animal fertilizing practices like mulching can help to conserve water. So for those folks, here’s an animal-friendly list. A handy dandy cheat sheet, if you will. Your options are as follows ...
 
1. Compost
Compost is the perfect plant food. It’s incredibly rich in myriad minerals, and it also provides important beneficial bacteria and other essential micro fauna. These organisms help to colonize the soil, keeping it “clean” and within a desirable pH range.
 
You can make your own compost at home, using yard waste and kitchen scraps, or you can buy premade compost. Many brands offer animal-free options. Just look for boxes that are marked “vegan.”
 
2. Liquid herbal infusions
Many of the most common plants, even some that are considered pests, can be full of important minerals such as nitrogen, iron, calcium, magnesium and sulfur. These “wonder weeds” include nettle, dandelion, oat straw, horse tail and comfrey, to name a few.
 
It’s easy to make a strong infusion from any of these, by chopping them up and allowing them to steep in a bucket of water in the sun. Once the brew is good and strong, it can be used to supplement your vegetables or fruit trees.
 
3. Seaweed
Sea vegetables are an excellent source of trace minerals, like sodium, copper, zinc and more. Many gardeners overlook the importance of these lesser minerals, because they’re so focused on the coveted trio, N-P-K. However, over time soil can become depleted of trace minerals, and plants can really begin to suffer.
 
Seaweed is sold as liquid or meal (often labeled as kelp). There are many brands available, so check out your local nursery.
 
4. Mulch with straw
Mulching is a technique whereby the garden bed is covered with some sort of barrier — in this case straw — either over the winter or in order to prepare a new plot for planting. The benefit of mulching with straw is that the organic matter slowly breaks down and “feeds” the soil. Mulching also encourages worms to live underneath, and worms are the perfect ingredient for healthy, happy dirt.
 
5. Nitrogen-fixing crops
Also called “green manure,” this is another technique that uses actual plants to create an organic fertilizer. The nitrogen-gathering plants are allowed to grow for just a short while, and then they’re tilled into the ground. The cover crops provide a protection from weeds, while turning them under returns the nitrogen to the soil. The most common crops used for green manure are wheat, oats, rye, vetch, clover, peas and broad beans.
 
Do you have any other animal-free fertilizing tips or tricks? Let us all know down in the comments!
 
Sayward Rebhal originally wrote this story for Networx.com. It is reprinted with permission here.

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anonymous
Richard H Jul 06 2012 at 11:25 AM
If you live near the ocean, go get some seaweed to add to your compost. The old saying is true, if it comes from the sea the trace minerals are free. Plus, kelp contains a gel that carries over into the compost that holds water. For folks who live more inland, water weeds have some value and are often available in bulk. For liquid plant infusions you should generaly choose deep rooted plants because they draw up more minerals. Alfalfa has roots that go down as much as 20 feet. Mulch needs a few crevats.
.... More
Straw, paper, cardboard, and saw dust/wood chips will draw nitrogen from the top of the soil. Predress the soil surface with rich compost and maybe some lime before you mulch for best results. Green manures are any green plant that you will "harvest" by tilling it under. While rye, oats, and buckwheat are excelent choices and great at controling weeds. Nonleagumes will not add nitrogen to the soil, but they will take up and hold any that might be lost.
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grooovym74's picture
grooovym74 Jul 04 2012 at 7:21 AM

what a smart way to go, you never think of plants fertilizing plants but it does make so much sense.

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