Raised Bed About done with gardening (continuation of Aug 2020 thread)

AlaskaSue

North to the Future
I’m by no means any kind of gardening expert, but I do have a couple local Alaskan experts on tap. I have lots of container gardens and one huge raised bed, building a second, and always lots of hanging flowers. My starting point is to mix peat, perlite and soil, then amending as needed for each plant/area. Most pests here are bunnies and moose -but bugs are almost never an issue …and I do think it’s because I keep the local birds so well fed that they hide out under the Brussels sprouts and cabbages on ‘hot’ days. They truly do great keeping all the bugs away.

I am taking my car to Kodiak late summer (via the trusty Tusty ferry) in order to not only bring back some of my Dad’s things, but a whole lot of semi-dried beach peat, as highly recommended by a member here <3 And she IS an expert!
 

inskanoot

Veteran Member

Osmocote Fertilizer (10 Things U Should Know)​

Written by Lisa Marshallin Fertilizer Last Updated February 2, 2023

Wondering how to feed plants? Feeding plants actually means fertilizing them. Gardening may be considered incomplete without using fertilizers.


When gardeners fail to get desired results from certain fertilizers, they stop fertilizing the plant. That’s a wrong practice. They should never stop fertilizing without knowing the actual reasons.

Before applying any type of fertilizer, you must have proper knowledge about fertilizers’ quantity and methods. Here we are going to talk about osmocote fertilizer, the most common plant food.


Osmocote fertilizer is an expensive artificial fertilizer. Gardeners use it to make bedding flowers, vegetables, and other plants healthy. It also helps the plants to grow fast. In appearance, it looks like tiny balls covered with a shell coated by nutrients. Osmocote Classic is formulated with an NPK of 19-6-12.

It is correlated with the percentage of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. Before using it, it is necessary to have complete knowledge about how and when to use fertilizers.

Want to get proper info about this amazing product.


Take a cup of tea, sit on your terrace and start reading this post!

What is Osmocote Fertilizer​

As a gardener, you are familiar with different organic and inorganic fertilizers. Osmocote fertilizers are one of them. Usually, professional gardeners use it despite it being an expensive synthetic fertilizer. They do so because of its quick results for their costly bedding flowers, vegetables, and other pot-grown plants.

Do you know what Osmocote fertilizer is?


Generally, it looks like a tiny, round peppercorn with an off-white color. They are not called granules, instead, they are known as prills. The buffy shell of prills is covered with basic nutrients.

Before planting, scatter the prills on the top of the garden soil. When the soil becomes warm and the rain or irrigation reaches the prills, the nutrients spill out of the shell to adjust in the soil. Plant roots observe them and fulfill their needs for food.

We recommend Osmocote Plus Indoor & Outdoor Plant Food. It works for 4-6 months without harming your plants as it is formulated according to the slow-release formula with no chemicals.


For indoor or outdoor plants, you should apply Osmocote every 6 months, and for fruits and vegetables, it is best to apply every 4 months.

Note: Osmocote fertilizers are available in water resistance bottles from 1.25 lb to 3 lb, and 10 lb of resealable bags.

Types of Fertilizer​

As you know fertilizers should be found in different forms. Some show slow results and others are quick and fast. We also have different fertilizers for indoor and outdoor plants. You can also get osmocote fertilizer in granules, liquid, and powder form.


Each type has its own benefits and effects. Basically, there are two main types of fertilizers:

  • Slow Release Formula
How do you make it possible for your plants to supply nutrients forever? It’s so simple! You can do it by adopting the slow-release formula of Osmocote fertilizers.


As the name shows, slow or time-release fertilizers take time to show action and results. It has slow effects on plants. But it is a plus point as it may not harm your plants and there is no fear of chemical burning.

Such fertilizers are designed to feed the plants, vegetables, and lawns all the time with healthy nutrients throughout the growing season. New Osmocote prills are enclosed in a protective shell that helps the nutrients to come slowly and feed the plants regularly, not at once like other inorganic fertilizers.

Always remember that you don’t use any type of fertilizer without reading its instructions printed on the label. Be sure to check the NPK (nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium). The NPK number of a product shows the percentage of essential nutrients in the fertilizer.


Nitrogen helps the plant in healthy growth and leaf-rich colors. In the development of new roots and producing seeds, phosphorus plays a vital role. On the other hand, potassium is important for nice and strong stems. So, it is crucial to check the NPK of fertilizer before purchasing and applying.

The best Osmocote slow-release formula is the Osmocote Classic With NPK 19-6-12. Nutrients are found in encapsulated form, which has many layers of polymeric resin. It may be released in 3-4 months.

  • Quick Release Formula
Fast or quick-release fertilizers work immediately. Such fertilizers are ready to use and you may not have to wait a long time for the best results. It is best to use quick-release fertilizer for newly established lawns.

With this type of fertilizer, it can be possible to provide nutrients for your grass and plants immediately. If you want to get rapid growth of plants, it is best to apply a fast-release formula. Try to apply it in starting the season of growth as it will help in the strong and tall growth of your turf. It may recover the grass which is naturally blocked by unwanted weeds.

If you are going to apply a quick release formula, you must be careful as sometimes it may harm your lawn. The reason is that it contains some kind of chemicals to help it for fast actions. But on the contrary, they can also burn your grass.


Over application is also dangerous because in this case, you may find burn damages on your lawn. The use of fast-release fertilizer means there is a need for re-application and it will be necessary. You have to mow your lawn much more than before., So, be prepared for it!

Here we suggest AM Leonard Fertilizer Osmocote 14-14-14. It is a controlled release formula that works for 3-4 months.

5 Methods To Apply Osmocote Fertilizer​

Some gardeners may not be interested in using fertilizers because they have bad experiences regarding them. The reason behind it is that they don’t have proper knowledge about using fertilizers. They don’t know how to apply fertilizers properly at the correct time.


But avoiding fertilizer is not the solution. Here we solve the problem in an easy way. We are going to mention some easy methods to apply any kind of fertilizer that will show results soon. Just read them carefully and follow them.

A well-known brand Osmocote provides you a complete guide to using its product labeled on it.

Let’s start to read the methods!


  1. Deep Soil
This is the ideal method for those who are making their lawn for planting but show nothing yet. If you apply the application deeply after planting, it will only damage your lawn but nothing good. First, determine the size of the place where you want to add fertilizer. Dig the soil deeply at the required size.

Then take the fertilizer and follow the directions labeled on the package to put the Osmocote fertilizer on. When you apply it to the whole planting area, mix the fertilizer into your soil properly with the help of a hand or a tiller. Don’t forget to wear safety gloves before spreading the fertilizer.


Here is a guiding video on how to prepare the soil for fertilizer.

  1. Individual Applications
If you think there is no need to apply Osmocote for the large area, you can limit the application to the place where you are going to plant. You can call this a dibbling method.


To start it, dig a planting hole for seeds, but it may be a little deeper than the hole you normally dig. In the bottom of the hole, put the required amount of fertilizer. If you are planting a specific root system, use 20% less fertilizer than the normally used application method.

After filling the bottom, plant your seeds as you normally do. This method is preferable as it requires less food. After planting, water the soil properly to establish the plant’s root system.

  1. Topdressing
If you want to fertilize the area where the plants have already grown, choose the technique of topdressing. Spread the fertilizer across the surface with your hand,hand-held spreader, or a drop spreader.

Be careful while watering the soil as this application needs less water. Many slow-release fertilizers are operated by moisture, so too much rain and water can wash away prematurely. Remember that Osmocote releases by Osmosis, putting nutrients into the soil for four to six months continuously.

  1. Banding
Banding is a fertilizing technique that works well for plants that have already been planted in rows. Make two-inch furrows on the side of plants and put the fertilizer in them. The depth of these furrows should be two inches deeper than the original seed furrow.

If you have already dug furrows for irrigation on both sides of the plants, the new fertilizing lines should be between them and the plants. If you are using a drip hose, add the fertilizer under the transistor.

It may take a long space in your garden, but is effective to handle long rows of vegetables and flowers.


  1. Repotting
You can apply one of the above methods to your indoor and outdoor plants. If you want to refresh the soil, repotting is the best procedure for this. To apply this technique, you must be more careful than before.

First, take out the plant from the soil carefully, work hard without disturbing the root balls. Now put the right amount of fertilizer into the soil, spread the prills in a way that they could not be hurt. Because it may leave a bad effect on their performance.


Repot the plant again with great care and water it normally.

How To Use Osmocote Fertilizer For Indoor Plants​

As Osmocote is a slow-release formula, you can apply it to indoor plants. It also shows the best results and feeds your plants inside properly. Here are some directions to apply Osmocote Fertilizer inside:

  • Take Osmocote Plus smart-release fertilizer and sprinkle one scoop of prills into the plant pot.
  • Mix the topsoil into 1-3 inches.
  • Water the plant.
  • Reapply the fertilizer every 6 months.
Soon you see the results. You can repeat the process every 4 months round the year.

How To Use Osmocote Fertilizer For Outdoor Plants​

For outdoor plants, select the area where you want to apply it and follow the instructions listed below:

  • Dig the soil 3 inches deep to spread the fertilizer.
  • Do this process across the area you want to fertilize.
  • Sprinkle the prills of Osmocote in the soil to feed the plants.
  • While transplanting or repotting, mix the prills into the soil.
  • Now water the soil according to its need.
  • Avoid overflowing the soil.
You apply it every 4 months in the growing season.


Frequently Asked Questions (Faqs)​

Is Osmocote good for all plants?​

It is the best-formulated fertilizer that has11 essential nutrients in it. It works with all varieties of plants in all growing conditions.

How quickly does Osmocote work?​

A classic formula of this fertilizer can release for four to five months at 60 degrees Fahrenheit. At 70 degrees it may work for three to four months. As the degree increases, the released time period decreases.

Can you dissolve Osmocote in the water?​

It can not be mixed in water directly as it is a time-released formula. So, apply it without adding water.


Do you think Osmocote is organic?​

No, it is not. It is an inorganic fertilizer but it works as an organic fertilizer because it contains all the benefits of organic fertilizers.

Final Verdict​

We are summarising here with the words that osmocote can prove the best fertilizer for both indoor and outdoor plants.

Surprisingly, it is found in granules form that is a coated protective shell. That releases nutrients slowly according to the needs of a plant.


We have also discussed easy methods to apply it without any help from an expert. You must be careful about the quantity of Osmocote as you may burn your lawn if you don’t follow the instructions.

Hi, This is Lisa Marshall. Lisa has been working with farmers for over thirteen years. It is his passion, hobby and profession. To facilitate other gardeners from her experience, she has decided to start this website to share her gardening experience with her plant lovers.
 

Raggedyman

Res ipsa loquitur
interesting conversation at the Lowes this morning. a lady made the remark that not only has Bonnie stopped selling plants in the small 6 pack trays but now a single Bonnie tomato plant in a 3" pot is $5.58. pointed out that you can buy a CASE of tomatoes during canning season for just under $8 bucks and you didn't have to water fertilize pick bugs off and talk to the damned things every day for 3 months before you got a few tomatoes.

she's not incorrect. this year is a first for me - started seeds THREE (3) separate times and the mice ate almost every danged one just as soon as I turned my back. set out glue traps - baited with peanut butter and dog kibble. traps right next to the seed trays ON the heat mats under the grow lights. didn't get even one of the little bastads. set out one of those chirppy electronic pest things. they must have considered it dinner music.

doubt I be planting much this year - fork it
 

kyrsyan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
interesting conversation at the Lowes this morning. a lady made the remark that not only has Bonnie stopped selling plants in the small 6 pack trays but now a single Bonnie tomato plant in a 3" pot is $5.58. pointed out that you can buy a CASE of tomatoes during canning season for just under $8 bucks and you didn't have to water fertilize pick bugs off and talk to the damned things every day for 3 months before you got a few tomatoes.

she's not incorrect. this year is a first for me - started seeds THREE (3) separate times and the mice ate almost every danged one just as soon as I turned my back. set out glue traps - baited with peanut butter and dog kibble. traps right next to the seed trays ON the heat mats under the grow lights. didn't get even one of the little bastads. set out one of those chirppy electronic pest things. they must have considered it dinner music.

doubt I be planting much this year - fork it
I can but bulk tomatoes from farmers. But flavor is a big issue for me. And I've learned to be picky because of that. If I can supplement my harvest by buying from local gardeners that are selling their excess I will. I will also buy from farms that go straight from field to stand.

I have been aware of the rising costs of plants, the rarity of the smaller packs, and some issues with getting seeds to sprout. Also some issues with open pollinated seed that isn't sprouting after being saved because of cross contamination.

This year I got some stuff at the local botanical garden sale. And then I bought some plugs from a greenhouse online. Cheaper than Bonnie but the plants look as good, if not better. I've got to get tomato seeds started this weekend. I'm late and I've got some open pollinated cultivars that I prefer.
 

Wildwood

Veteran Member
The day of the reasonably priced starts is long gone unless you can find someone doing it as a side business...I don't know of anyone in my area and I've given some thoughts to doing it on a small scale.

All we can get locally are Bonnie plants.

We do still have a large store in the city kind of like Home Depot and Lowe's that carries the small three packs, etc. at a good price but I rarely get up there. I start all mine now and only buy the sweet potato slips if I don't have enough...cost me $60 last year because mine were a bust ad I plant a 4 x 25 raised bed full, but they are premium quality and I always get a great yield from them...even last year in all that heat. Mine are looking good this year so I shouldn't need to buy any.

To protect my starts, I ordered these... Robot or human?

They will hold twenty of the large solo size cups and 24 of the smaller. The lids are clear so I can put the top on and protect my starts if it's a little too cold or at night to keep out varmints. If I want to bring them in, I can stack them up. Also, I switched to clear solos type cups from Sam's since I do my tomato method where I start out with only two inches of dirt...the opaque sides blocked a certain amount of light.



I was traumatized in the past when my peppers were ate by mice or rats so nothing is left outside at night uncovered. I go to great lengths to protect my starts...crazy plant lady here.
 
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Raggedyman

Res ipsa loquitur
This year I got some stuff at the local botanical garden sale. And then I bought some plugs from a greenhouse online. Cheaper than Bonnie but the plants look as good, if not better. I've got to get tomato seeds started this weekend. I'm late and I've got some open pollinated cultivars that I prefer.
that's a good tip!!! thx :D
 

Raggedyman

Res ipsa loquitur
never have bought plants that way K - but this is a good idea. first time EVER that I've had so much trouble with mice and seeds. way too late to try starting seeds here now and i'll be damened if I'm going to pay almost 6 bucks for Bonnie 3" plants.

many thx for the tip !
 

pauldingbabe

The Great Cat
I've bought plants and seeds on Etsy. Everything was really nice and everything was grown in my planting zone in my state. Everything was acclimated to my ecology so everything did well.

I paid about the same as if I had gone to HD and bought bonie organic whatever....
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
Don't ask me how but my son grew tomatoes from actual tomatoes that he put in half plastic blue barrels. Bizarre. He has had to put wire mesh around all of his plants because the squirrels are really bad this year. I go outside and they don't even run, they are too busy burying and unburying acorns. The tree rats even ate the blooms off some of his roses. The only thing that phases those vermin is when our pug decides they are his new play toy. He chases them all over and trees them. They bark, bark, bark back at him and he just smiles his puggy grin and dares them to come down. I don't want them to get into the tops of my giant palms. A couple of years ago during another bad drought they got into two of them and killed them. Thankfully we have at least one black racer around the house but that's not enough. I think the gators got all of the outdoor cats in the neighborhood.
 

kyrsyan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
never have bought plants that way K - but this is a good idea. first time EVER that I've had so much trouble with mice and seeds. way too late to try starting seeds here now and i'll be damened if I'm going to pay almost 6 bucks for Bonnie 3" plants.

many thx for the tip !
I haven't done it for veggies before. But I have for hard to find herbs. I really was impressed with the arnica she sent, so I decided it was worth doing another order for some more of the herbs I wanted and the super hot peppers that I grow for my brother.

All in all, it probably broke even. But then, Bonnie doesn't sell multiple varieties of scorpion and reaper peppers. Or more unusual varieties of paprika, and calendula.
 

JMG91

Veteran Member
I've been trying something new this year, along with my new garden boxes that hubby built me last fall. I purchased two GreenStalk vertical planters--put bush bean seeds and bare root strawberries in them. I also made my own diy hydroponic grow towers from a video I found on youtube:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O8-su9qeIDg


Run time: 11min, 47 sec

So far, the strawberries are doing much better in the hydroponic buckets, and the bush beans are doing much better in the vertical planters. Perhaps a method like this might work for those having a difficult time this year.
 

inskanoot

Veteran Member
Don't ask me how but my son grew tomatoes from actual tomatoes that he put in half plastic blue barrels. Bizarre. He has had to put wire mesh around all of his plants because the squirrels are really bad this year. I go outside and they don't even run, they are too busy burying and unburying acorns. The tree rats even ate the blooms off some of his roses. The only thing that phases those vermin is when our pug decides they are his new play toy. He chases them all over and trees them. They bark, bark, bark back at him and he just smiles his puggy grin and dares them to come down. I don't want them to get into the tops of my giant palms. A couple of years ago during another bad drought they got into two of them and killed them. Thankfully we have at least one black racer around the house but that's not enough. I think the gators got all of the outdoor cats in the neighborhood.

Offgrid with Doug & Stacy had a YouTube vid about putting tomato tops on some dirt and storing in the root cellar over the Winter.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Raggedy and others with problems protecting young seedlings...

I'm not having any luck managing a direct link, but check out Temu.com

Look for plant starting trays, or similar. They have some really nice 12 pack seed starting trays (and other sizes), with a humidity dome. Some of the 12 pack trays include an LED light, which let's you leave the dome on for several days after sprouting.

They also have a lot of planting bags, and I was very impressed with how sturdy they are. I'm putting potatoes in 3 of them this year as an experiment, and set up 6 strawberry bags as well. I never did much container gardening, except for some raised beds, on our home farm... we had 160 acres of deep, fertile loam soil, so there was no need. But here, the soil sucks. And because DS wants no non organic fertilizer used, it's going to be a slow process to get it to the point where it produces much. So, I'm trying bags filled with compost...

Summerthyme
 

Raggedyman

Res ipsa loquitur
This year I got some stuff at the local botanical garden sale. And then I bought some plugs from a greenhouse online. Cheaper than Bonnie but the plants look as good, if not better.
K
took that MOST EXCELLENT advice and went over to a local green house this morning. bought all the plants I'm going to grow this spring. not only were they in GREAT shape but we helped a local person AND the prices were ridiculous. as an example - 4 pack of Cherokee Purple tomatoes - $3 - and they were the size of Bonnie's 3" pot - a single plant - that went for $5.58

many thanks - why I never thought about this myself before is an unknown . . . probably becasue I've just always started my own from saved seeds and didn't take that trip mentally.:shr:
 

dioptase

Veteran Member
I use the Osmocote Plus 6 month version, twice a year. But then I'm in zone 9 CA.

I use it in the spring, and try to remember to use it again in the fall, but I only use it on ornamentals. I try to grow the kitchen garden as organically as possible.
 
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