Harunobu
Chumono
I did cringe a little when first Paul Eslinger talked about 'food' and then it became clear he meant fertilizer. I mentioned Ryan Neil positively before, and when he said "What is food for a plant?" and people started answering 'fertilizer' and then he said "No!" it was such a breath of fresh air for me. And then he starts talking about "If I eat fish and chips everyday .... so I use some different type of fertilizer every time". Come on, man. Yeah, the plant won't really care too much if the fertilizer is organic or chemical, or what the specific NPK ratio is. It generates its food from water, CO2 and light. And it needs minerals from the soil. Especially nitrogen, but of course also phosphorous and potassium. And then all the trace elements like copper, zinc, magnesium and selenium. The plant needs these minerals. Whether it says 'Specialized feed for requisite royal rose gardens' or 'Bonsai fertilizer from Japan' or 'Cheap tomato plant fertilizer' on the cover doesn't really matter that much. Companies know that people into bonsai or roses or orchids are willing to pay more for fertilized than people that want to grow their own potatoes. So they brand their package and adjust price based on what the customer is willing to pay. Not what is inside.
If you use chemical fertilizer, you need to apply dilute and more often. And if you use organic, these elements need to be decomposed by soil bacteria first before they become water-soluble and available for the roots to take them up.
Ah and Paul also does not know why (satsuki) flowers sport. So he came up with his own theory of sap lines.
If you use chemical fertilizer, you need to apply dilute and more often. And if you use organic, these elements need to be decomposed by soil bacteria first before they become water-soluble and available for the roots to take them up.
Ah and Paul also does not know why (satsuki) flowers sport. So he came up with his own theory of sap lines.
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