I just started working at my local garden center and felt overwhelmed with the amount of information I needed to absorb. I stumbled across these videos after watching multiple Intro to Horticulture lectures. They help so much and it’s making me much better at my job so thank you for that
@@jngx80 it's more likely that they're just underfunded. But if the free resource exists, why should they not take advantage of it while money's tight?
@@pyramidion5911 Bro. What's more likely is that YOUR school was lazy. My guy said his school went out the way to give extra learning opportunities outside the state mandated requirements and this appeared alien to you.
Oh wow, what a great video. So many of these deficiencies might appear, at first glance, to be pest damage. For a newbie like me this is invaluable information, thank you! I recently watched a YT video where the "experienced gardener" criticised new gardeners for worrying about every little hole in a leaf, or a leaf that doesn't look right. I love how you take all levels of experience into consideration and actually show that one leaf not looking well can be a big deal. Subscribed, liked and saved. And shared!
Your 2/2 man! watched another video of yours and loved how informative it was. This video, I learned even more than the first. Can't say that about a lot of "how-to" or "101" videos people put up. Love the use of the computer and visuals as well. really gets the message across that you want people to understand what you're talking about instead of putting up a quick video to focus on the views/likes/subscribes.
Superb. Dude you did an amazing job delivering this information.! By far the best video I've seen covering nutrient deficiencies in plants. You say you are not a botanist a few times, but my friend you ARE a botanist of high caliber! The video itself was extremely well done too! Thank you for your time!
I'm a horticulture graduate student working on my masters and then PhD at Colorado State University. I'm taking a class called Horticulture and Human Health and Well-being. Fun fact, my professor uses this video in his lecture.
This is awesome. I have recently started keeping plants in containers and had no idea what was wrong with a few of them, now I have a good idea what the problems may be. Thanks for this concise but info packed video. I learned more here than I did in several months spent researching specific symptoms. I subscribed.
THANK YOU FOR SUCH A VALUABLE VIDEO!!!!! It has been twenty or more years since I have grown a garden. I have forgotten more than I remember. I was taught by my grandma. Now, she didn’t know what deficiency a symptom meant. She just knew what to do to correct it. She was so knowledgeable about gardens. Anyway, I am starting a garden, from scratch. At a house, that had hay fields, cattle, chickens, and, somewhere, a garden. The house sat empty for several years before we bought it. So it is all overgrown. So I have no idea where the garden was located. It has some patches of good soil. But mostly, clay. I have a question, if you might happen to know. Can you get the right nitrates, for a garden, from pond water? I use to breed fish. I understand the cycle of tank water. Ponds are the same…basically. But I don’t know enough about chemistry, to know the answer to this. I keep hearing, to add organic material, and plant nitrogen fixing plants, to help begin to admin the soil. Wondering if pond water would be a help in this. Or would it be like putting fertilizer on the soil. And rain just leach it away? I just now found your channel. This video here, is the best, most informative garden video I have seen. And believe me, I’ve watched plenty! Who knew plants needed chlorine!? Well, you did.lol but doubt many others know!
Very few fertilizer products have BORON because it can be toxic if over used. In my experience, its essential for some vegetables such as beet root. A quick remedy is to add 2 tablespoons of Mule Team Borax to hot water to dissolve and add to a sprinkling can and lightly spread the water across 100 sq ft of garden to correct a minor deficiency.. I use a lot of fish/kelp to add micro-nutrients to the soil.
Maybe do a video on pH and how it affects nutrient availability because this is the first thing you should be checking before making any amendments to your medium , it would help explain why certain elements become unavailable if not in their recommended range.
Good to know. I had trouble growing my pepper plants last year as I used rotted wood in my soil. This caused a yellowing in my pepper plant leaves until I used liquid nettle and comfrey on them, that made them jump out the pots and green up nicely with fruits. These plants appears in my May 2021 update from 5m 40s, when I recorded this I hadn't quite worked it out, I thought it was well rotted fertile decent wood soil lol. I didn't understand my NPK so well not to mention all the other nutrients.
Superb. Dude you did an amazing job delivering this information.! By far the best video I've seen covering nutrient deficiencies in plants. You say you are not a botanist a few times, but my friend you ARE a botanist of high caliber! The video itself was extremely well done too! Thank you for your time!
I used to be a bodybuilder and obsessed about nutrition and diet. I apply what I learned building my own body, to my garden. (We're more similar that you think in a certain way) I would love a list of matter to add to a compost heap, for certain nutrition issues I.e Nitrogen - comfrey, nettle, lawn clippings.. Carbon - Branches and woody materials.. Calcium - Dandelion leaves.. Iron - Spinach and other dark leaves.. Etcetera... I figure that just like taking a multivitamin and eating crap all day, the soil will not be treated by endless fertiliser. Seems similar to fast food. Good in a crisis but not best practice. You must make the garden "eat" well (compost and mulch) I prefer a holistic approach and treat the soil with organic matter more often with fertiliser. Seems to be working well. I know troubleshooting means using some fertiliser, as issues occur, but I prefer to treat the problem not the symptoms. Just like in bodybuilding, where I started scrawny and finished at 105kg of muscle; The plot on our rental property was a neglected hell of rubble, weeds and 3ft of sand. Been applying permaculture methods to treat the soil up to 4ft deep in places. Healthy soil - healthy food - healthy ecosystem.....its all linked. Brilliant video. Very helpful Now where did I put that molybdenum....
I applied this by making a dandelion tea for my lawn. I had tried a comfrey/nettle tea but it only mildly responded. Figured nutrition uptake may be the problem. One week after fertilizing with the dandelion tea, my lawn is lush and verdant again.
Useful video. As somebody already commented below, pH can have a significant impact on nutrient availability, but I want to add two other comments. One is the synergy between Calcium and Boron. Plants cannot really benefit from Calcium unless they have adequate Boron, and plants cannot really benefit from Boron, unless they have adequate Calcium. Second point is that Molybdenum is especially important for legumes (as it is part of the process by which the rhizobia can fix atmospheric Nitrogen to make it available to our gardening system), but these rhyzobia ALSO need Cobalt, generally not considered a plant essential nutrient. On my farm, Cobalt is not likely to be short (because I feed it in a supplement to my Livestock) but it might be something to consider if your legumes are not nodulating effectively
Thank you so much for this video. I am a beginner Gardener with lots of enthusiasm. but as you can imagine, coming up against leaves changing colour. I will look out for more of your videos.
One thing to also consider, if the soil PH is too high or to low, the different minerals have issues depending on whether or not the PH is high or low. Most plants do well with a ph between 7 and 5.5. Outside of thy range, and issues arise. So the liberal might be there, but it is not accessible due to improper PH. And then we throw biology in the mix, which makes the nutrients available to plant like through what called nutrient cycling. Lost of info to be discussed here. But you do a great job at showing and explaining the different deficiencies through the photos chosen. I commend you. And I give thanks for the info.
I like Kevins tips regardless, however Idont believe a regular farmer does soil test. The food most farmers produce taste like it was grown on alkaline soil where phosphorous isnt avaiable. Its tasteless and big nothing more. Like its made to cover a fake demand
Ammonia for nitrogen. Diammonium phosphate for phosphorous. Banana peels or wood ash for potassium. Three wonderful ingredients for a great fertilizer.
There are factors to consider when looking at exactly what you use to provide your soil with a full array of nutrients. One of them that was not mentioned was pH. An acid soil that you want to keep acid might get powdered sulfur, magnesium sulfate solution, and calcium sulfate. These things will either be neutral or acid in reaction to the soil and provide Calcium, Sulphur and Magnesium as well. In alkaline soil, they would tend to lower the pH. If you have soil that needs the pH raised a bit and needs Calcium, Magnesium, and sulfur, Dolomitic limestone has both magnesium and calcium in it and Calcium sulfate provides calcium and sulfur. The limestone also raises the pH. The interplay between pH and nutrient availability is something good to understand. This also helps you choose sources of nutrients that go with the pH you have and like or change the pH toward what you want. Calcium Sulphate is also good for loosening hard clay soil and helping repair salt damage. Various organic fertilizers can raise, lower or work well with your existing pH. It's good to learn about these things and the info is readily available. This was a good presentation. I liked the symptoms of deficiencies and how they were portrayed and described.
I've seen all of these at one time or another, never knew they were experiencing deficiencies. This put so many puzzle pieces together for me, thank you 👍
The reason magnesium was on the list twice is likely because someone meant to write manganese, since that is an essential element needed for a plant to thrive
11:00 I hooked up a copper pipe to my rDWC system and the copper leeched into the nutrients and I got copper poisoning, I wound up losing a bunch of plants before I figured out what had happened.
I didn’t realize til this vid the relationship of Mg to Phosphorus, but that makes total sense in what I see at my hydroponic tomato farm. Yellowing first, then the red shortly after. Thank you!
Thank you MAN, a lot of growers ESPECIALLY BEGINNERS doesn't care about THE MICRO ELEMENTS OR THE MICROBIAL STUFF IN THE SOIL They just focus on NPK AND THE TYPE OF THE SOIL (I MEAN: COCO PEAT, PEATMOS, MEDIUM, POTTING SOIL, ETC....), and also of course ignoring the PH LEVELS, SO THANK GOD AND THANK YOU OF COURSE FOR YOUR EDUCATIONAL VIDEOS BUDDY ✌
Definitely the most helpful video I've seen in regards to nutrients. Saving this one for reference! So here's a return favor since you questioned the pronunciation of molybdenum. (you mostly had it right. lol) mol•YB•de•NUM - you enunciate on the second and fourth syllables. Sounds like mo-LIB-den-UM.
This is so true, and different plants need different amounts of each. My tomatoes need calcium whereas my lavender does not need as much if any. I'm so glad someone broke this down and explained it.
I took a picture of each one and am putting into a collage for easy identification! Thank you I really think this will help me to care for my garden more efficiently!
I know I'm late to the party but I have to say that I was looking for exactly this explanation when I started my search today. I wasted 20 mins of my time with all these random videos that just didn't explain it properly or at least to my understanding. I then came here. Even though I've been a subscriber for a few weeks I didn't look here first. For now on, i'm always coming here first. I learned so much from the other videos here that I really should start here all the time. This was exactly what I needed to learn in more ways than one. Here's why I was searching for this. I picked up some tomato plants from home depot. I've had them for about 7 days and the ones I haven't had a chance to transplant from soil to hydro yet have the lower leaves turning yellow and drying up. (I currently do not have nutrients in the ones I transplanted). I've been giving them tap water every few days. (no nutrients or PH adjustment) My first search to try to find out why said " it's either to much or to little water" WHAT?! How does that help me? Anyway, tomorrow they are getting added to the DWC and i'll be adding the nutrients. I'm hoping the GH 3 part I have takes care of what they need . The PH in my city water is high even after adding nutrients, so I'm adjusting that too. I'm hoping getting them in water with the nutrients will help resolve their issues. Your channel should be called Professor of Epic Gardening or Epic Gardening Master Class.
Very nicely explained starting from basics. Next question is how to (detailed step by step procedure) add each of fertilizers and micro nutrients to the soil or water (hydroponics) ? Which all are the good testing instruments available in market place to test presence (means absence) of each one of it.
I loved this video. I often am confused about what is wrong with my garden. I get tiny dark spots in my fruit tree leaves and was told by a local nursery it was iron deficiency but that appears incorrect based on the information here...!!?? Also the Word Molybdenum... I was taught to use the following trick to remember how it is pronounced “My Lips are numb” ..... (moe lib de numb). Thank you for this video
If you want to know what's wrong with your plants consult your local university extension service, imo. Mine takes samples for a 10 dollar fee, which they say is just to discourage too many samples, but they talk for free. With a BS in Plant Biology, a pesticide license, and 20 years in the field- I still took samples to those who knew better than I (plants are now just my passion, not my job anymore). Necrotic lesions aren't just from nutrients. edit: I've seen people pump up nutrients so many times because they mistook disease for a nutrient problem. Living in New England, almost every problem I see with fruit trees is disease/site related, not a nutrient issue.
Awesome video man I love it when people share real knowledge! It is definitely a lot to ingest but well worth the time to learn how to keep your garden fine-tuned. I've always been a fan of Harley Smith and he's with the NPK University. Just a treasure Trove of knowledge!
You'll notice Iron deficiencies first when your soil pH is too high because its the first be become unavailable at higher pH's, top of the plant will be really slow stunted and yellower than the bottom leaves
Thank you EG, this is a really good video. Shows you exactly what to look for in terms of nutrient deficiencies but also the importance of trace elements. This cannot be emphasised enough. Having been in the Diamond Exploration business for over 45 years, over that time I learned that ANY volcanic rock extrusions but in particular Kimberlites (in which diamonds occur), if crushed sufficiently fine enough (say around 0.1mm or less) are sooooooo beneficial to plants when applied as a supplement. It's like enabling vegetative growth on steroids. Well done mate. Brilliant.
@@garethbaus5471 Not exactly. It is a byproduct of mineral processing (usually as microfine sludge) discarded to landfill. One of the haulage contractors that used to truck away our sludge was also a horticulturist who used it for his property and reported great results.
Most videos are talking good sense of deficiencies. But part of the gardening problems could be overdosing for those who are new and showed too much care. I am one. I learn knowledge and experience from you all and looking forward to learn the subject and effects of overdosing.
Many people create content on that topic and I really appreciate your work! But could you please also make a follow-up video on how to amend deficient soils in an organic farming context? I'm not talking compost, PH, etc. ... I would like to know how to add e.g. Boron when a Boron deficiency has been detected if you are an organic gardener.
Nutrient deficiencies are fascinating, the way they all work together. Wanting to understand more opened up a new and endless world of soil science to explore 🙏
So great! Thank you for your hard work putting all these videos together. I have been subscribed for a few months and you’ve helped me save a lot of plants! Cheers!
Very nicely explained...you explained the small nuances that help identify some of the lesser known deficiencies from the big three which often look similar. Thank you so much!
Man.....this is really awesome information. I've had curly spinach leaf, and purple tomato leaves, but these were a purple variety so still not sure about that one plant. I don't count nutrients as I have always used organic gardening methods and I don't mean those organic pellets from the store. I just compost and cover with straw. I get some council wood chips and leaves and compost those with urine. I also add wood ash and char to the compost. I rarely have pests. I companion plant because It self seeds a lot. I also grow cover plants that I let die and rot, like raddish, clover and peas. I have had curly leaf on a peach tree last year, but it's come back ok this year, just cut it back hard and got rid of the ants that were spreading it. It was them or harlequin bugs. I dust elemental sulphur with diatamacious earth and burdock root for a pesticide and my spinach, bracicas and cellery come up really dark green, so that makes sense.
I found that synthetic nutrients may not always mean chemically made. it could mean the organic mater has been broken down in the way the plant can up take.
This is a darn good video. Micro-nutrient deficiencies are interesting in that certain ones are more apt to occur in certain plants and in certain soil conditions and localities. Here in Southern California for instance avocados are prone to zinc deficiency which shows up as rounded as opposed to pointed leaves. On my trees I broadcast Zinc Sulfate at about 1 lb per inch of tree diameter every 4-5 years. I'm really interested in cheating agents like EDTA which should allow plants to take up micronutrients easier. I've used a synthetic called Grow-More in 20-20-20 which is a water soluble product that contains micronutrients as well. It's also available in several different N-P-K ratios depending on the plant need. That product along with elimination of high amounts of interference elements like Chlorine seem to supply a pretty good balance of micronutrients as well as understanding the local water and soil and which Moros are apt to be deficient.
No it's not. This video is filled with wrong facts. You want to start understanding what plants need you need to understand what happens in soil in nature.
What's an organic way to increase phosphorus in the soil? I use coffee to increase nitrogen, banana for potassium, egg powder for calcium; what would help with phosphorus?
Are you recommending that we test container soil as well? I just use a balanced blend of compost, peat, and an quality bag mix. I don't like use the garden soil that we have available locally and my own soil is just gravelly-silt. Not too much going on in that stuff.
Charcoal is also needed and carbon it’s not on the list But garlic is for fungicide so it needs to be in the compost. This includes sea salt water to deter pestilence and insecticide.
Wow this is great! So complete and so well stated and the emphasis on the most important and most likely telltales in the garden and their causes. Really excellent, thank you so much!
Quick question. Would all of these deficiencies be solved by having a good compost? Would composted vegetables, fruits, grass ect. have all of these nutrients?
My understanding is that while really good compost will have some of most of them, that even really good compost won't have *enough* of most of them. And what exactly your soil+compost will have will vary between areas.
Hi, There 's sooooo much to learn from you! Please keep it coming. By the way, you shocked me when you indicated that you 're not a formal plant scientist.🤔
Interesting vid- but I've learned from soil biologists that the soil has all of those elements- it may not be bioavailable to your plants when there isn't adequate symbiotic interaction between the microbes and roots. The cheapest and best long-term way to benefit your plants is to increase those bacteria and fungi, which will attract all other parts of soil food web (nematodes, arthropods, worms, etc.)To do that, most recommend compost tea and more live roots in the soil (cover crops and even weeds sometimes). Makes sense.
Depends on your geology and soil age/history. It's pretty cheap at the garden level to do a soil test and balance the minerals in your garden to ensure your veggies, in association with soil biotic processes, are packed full of what your body needs.
Constituents of soils which are easily leached by rain and taken up by plants are stored (A-only in the organic fraction of the soil B-in all parts of the soil C-on the exchange sites of the organic and clay components D-in the silicate fraction of the soil) Which is the correct answer please
I’ve noticed that there are no fertilisers or micro nutrient additives in Australia that contain Chloride. If someone were to grow with an inert substrate like rock wool, all the plants would have a Chloride deficiency.
Thanks for this video! Very helpful and a nice summery. However you didn’t go into water and photosynthesis, I know it’s easily overlooked but actually a huuuuge part of plant nutrition, I read recently that plants only get about 5 percent of their nutrients form the earth!!!! Most of it is from photosynthesis. Burn a plant and analyse the ash and there will be oxygen, nitrogen, carbon and hydrogen - all present in the air. Something to consider I think when talking about plant nutrition.
Fun fact the patterns on leaves, branch, roots, even lightning are all called Lichtenburg figures. Some really cool art done with them in experiements.
Great video is very useful. Now that I know what my plants are deficient in. How do I fix each problem? Which brands do you recommend for nitrogen, magnesium, and potassium? Its all different plants.
This was a great education! Much appreciated. Is there a community or forum that helps people figure out which deficiencies their plant is experiencing from pictures?
well the sad part is that most of these symptoms are also caused by fungus or bacterial or virus or nematode diseases so what i suggest is to be careful if there are other signs on other parts of the plants example on stem or flowers so that you don't only focus on the symptoms showing on the leaves
Not sure if this is a stupid question or smart question: can you dissolve vitamin supplements in water and feed them to your plants (or rather is it a bad idea)?
I grow outdoors in soil. What should my water ph be? My water is 7.0 out of the tap. Also what ph should my water with food be? I use liquid nutrients.
Does this pertain to potting mix as well? I have used my potting mix for three years and Im pretty sure all my pots are spent. 13 tomato plants with only 4 tomatoes.
There are zero pages about pons and cannibas. That would help many including me. How much to feed max minimum and how to come to a conclusion on how much and when. Hello
I grow creasote in minnesota which needs toxic soil to help with plant shock so I actually mix in chromium to potting mix and sand recreate caliche toxicity.
9:26 My tomato plant looked exactly like this, so I must have a chlorine deficiency… how do I, or what to add to the soil to help with it? Also with the magnesium!?
I wonder if my loquat trees leaves were dying and turning brown due to nutrient deficiency or if they die quick like that naturally. Thank you for specific explanations
Hi there, I reside in LA sub-tropical zone 9. Tks for info on yellow leaves. Very helpful! I'm wondering about my Gardenia bushes which are 3+ yrs. They flower beautifully and are quite fragrant when blooming. Many of their leaves are now turning yellow. Do I try feeding them Nitrogen? I don't recall them yellowing this much in the past. Is it too late to fertilize once more prior to winter. Help please! Tks.
You point out that you have Magnesium twice in the list. One of them should be Manganese. I see that has been fixed in the linked blog post but it hasn't been changed in the video description.
So in short: when you buy fertilizer, majority of it is empty filling. Also when you plant flowers and basil under your tomato, you are very meticulously fertilizing your tomato for fruit, your flowers for flowering and your basil for leaves. You use a pipet dropper to not mess up your other plants right next to each other ;)
Great job!! Thanks for sharing. I just got started on hydroponic lettuces and I noticed their leafs got some little brown dots, what could be happening? Is everything ok? Should I worry?
ok - great information. But what do we need to do once we identify them? Will be really helpful if you can let us know what we need to add - for instance, calcium can be added through eggshells.
I understand it changes depending on where the life cycle of the plant is, and for that matter what plant etc etc. I’m just curious if I put 10 10 10 is that a hot mix? Not sure what percent of nutes my soil should be.
would lazy man's compost tea (handful composting scraps in bucket of water, let sit a few weeks, no bubbler) give all the nutrients needed? I also have "cow pond tea" made like lazy compost tea, but using what was found in a cow pond and a kitchen few scraps? so far my plants love it
I have some plants issue, however, it seems not similar from the above. My plant is growing tall but from bottom to the top, the leaves are getting tiny and tiny, the shape also curve outward
is putting ash in a soil good or bad? my dad keeps putting his ash in the garden from his wood burner... but quite a lot.. huge piles of ash & charcoal all over the garden from years of burning wood..
I am a hydroponic farmer and i usually find the recepie for npk and macro nutrients but never for micro. Why is that? What is the ideal method to decide the quantity micro in a plant?
My plants are yellowing in the veins, new growth, rest of plant is very nice, large, massive growth noticable every two days...any ideas? Thanks for the videos!
I just started working at my local garden center and felt overwhelmed with the amount of information I needed to absorb. I stumbled across these videos after watching multiple Intro to Horticulture lectures. They help so much and it’s making me much better at my job so thank you for that
i wish you have a successful work and good luck
My school gave us the link to this video to assist with schoolwork and homework.
Lmao your school is lazy
rip
Lazy schools. My nephew’s middle school in San Francisco always links to khan academy. Horrible text books as well.
@@jngx80 it's more likely that they're just underfunded. But if the free resource exists, why should they not take advantage of it while money's tight?
@@pyramidion5911 Bro. What's more likely is that YOUR school was lazy. My guy said his school went out the way to give extra learning opportunities outside the state mandated requirements and this appeared alien to you.
Oh wow, what a great video. So many of these deficiencies might appear, at first glance, to be pest damage. For a newbie like me this is invaluable information, thank you!
I recently watched a YT video where the "experienced gardener" criticised new gardeners for worrying about every little hole in a leaf, or a leaf that doesn't look right. I love how you take all levels of experience into consideration and actually show that one leaf not looking well can be a big deal. Subscribed, liked and saved. And shared!
Your 2/2 man! watched another video of yours and loved how informative it was. This video, I learned even more than the first. Can't say that about a lot of "how-to" or "101" videos people put up. Love the use of the computer and visuals as well. really gets the message across that you want people to understand what you're talking about instead of putting up a quick video to focus on the views/likes/subscribes.
Superb. Dude you did an amazing job delivering this information.! By far the best video I've seen covering nutrient deficiencies in plants. You say you are not a botanist a few times, but my friend you ARE a botanist of high caliber! The video itself was extremely well done too! Thank you for your time!
I'm a horticulture graduate student working on my masters and then PhD at Colorado State University. I'm taking a class called Horticulture and Human Health and Well-being. Fun fact, my professor uses this video in his lecture.
This is awesome. I have recently started keeping plants in containers and had no idea what was wrong with a few of them, now I have a good idea what the problems may be. Thanks for this concise but info packed video. I learned more here than I did in several months spent researching specific symptoms. I subscribed.
Thank you for your subscription - means a lot to me! - Kevin
It's funny how a lot of the signs of malnutrition just look like normal variegation.
This was so good! Thank you! I love how you say you're a simple gardener but you always back your suggestions up with science and evidence.
THANK YOU FOR SUCH A VALUABLE VIDEO!!!!! It has been twenty or more years since I have grown a garden. I have forgotten more than I remember. I was taught by my grandma. Now, she didn’t know what deficiency a symptom meant. She just knew what to do to correct it. She was so knowledgeable about gardens.
Anyway, I am starting a garden, from scratch. At a house, that had hay fields, cattle, chickens, and, somewhere, a garden. The house sat empty for several years before we bought it. So it is all overgrown. So I have no idea where the garden was located. It has some patches of good soil. But mostly, clay. I have a question, if you might happen to know. Can you get the right nitrates, for a garden, from pond water? I use to breed fish. I understand the cycle of tank water. Ponds are the same…basically. But I don’t know enough about chemistry, to know the answer to this. I keep hearing, to add organic material, and plant nitrogen fixing plants, to help begin to admin the soil. Wondering if pond water would be a help in this. Or would it be like putting fertilizer on the soil. And rain just leach it away?
I just now found your channel. This video here, is the best, most informative garden video I have seen. And believe me, I’ve watched plenty! Who knew plants needed chlorine!? Well, you did.lol but doubt many others know!
Very few fertilizer products have BORON because it can be toxic if over used. In my experience, its essential for some vegetables such as beet root. A quick remedy is to add 2 tablespoons of Mule Team Borax to hot water to dissolve and add to a sprinkling can and lightly spread the water across 100 sq ft of garden to correct a minor deficiency.. I use a lot of fish/kelp to add micro-nutrients to the soil.
Good stuff
Maybe do a video on pH and how it affects nutrient availability because this is the first thing you should be checking before making any amendments to your medium , it would help explain why certain elements become unavailable if not in their recommended range.
Good to know. I had trouble growing my pepper plants last year as I used rotted wood in my soil. This caused a yellowing in my pepper plant leaves until I used liquid nettle and comfrey on them, that made them jump out the pots and green up nicely with fruits. These plants appears in my May 2021 update from 5m 40s, when I recorded this I hadn't quite worked it out, I thought it was well rotted fertile decent wood soil lol. I didn't understand my NPK so well not to mention all the other nutrients.
Superb. Dude you did an amazing job delivering this information.! By far the best video I've seen covering nutrient deficiencies in plants. You say you are not a botanist a few times, but my friend you ARE a botanist of high caliber! The video itself was extremely well done too! Thank you for your time!
Bro I have started growing my own weed and I love it, I learn everything I need from you and you never even talk about weed, nuff said.
how to make use of weed 😮 tnx
.
I used to be a bodybuilder and obsessed about nutrition and diet. I apply what I learned building my own body, to my garden. (We're more similar that you think in a certain way)
I would love a list of matter to add to a compost heap, for certain nutrition issues
I.e
Nitrogen - comfrey, nettle, lawn clippings..
Carbon - Branches and woody materials..
Calcium - Dandelion leaves..
Iron - Spinach and other dark leaves..
Etcetera...
I figure that just like taking a multivitamin and eating crap all day, the soil will not be treated by endless fertiliser.
Seems similar to fast food. Good in a crisis but not best practice.
You must make the garden "eat" well (compost and mulch)
I prefer a holistic approach and treat the soil with organic matter more often with fertiliser. Seems to be working well.
I know troubleshooting means using some fertiliser, as issues occur, but I prefer to treat the problem not the symptoms.
Just like in bodybuilding, where I started scrawny and finished at 105kg of muscle;
The plot on our rental property was a neglected hell of rubble, weeds and 3ft of sand.
Been applying permaculture methods to treat the soil up to 4ft deep in places.
Healthy soil - healthy food - healthy ecosystem.....its all linked.
Brilliant video. Very helpful
Now where did I put that molybdenum....
I applied this by making a dandelion tea for my lawn. I had tried a comfrey/nettle tea but it only mildly responded.
Figured nutrition uptake may be the problem.
One week after fertilizing with the dandelion tea, my lawn is lush and verdant again.
Useful video. As somebody already commented below, pH can have a significant impact on nutrient availability, but I want to add two other comments. One is the synergy between Calcium and Boron. Plants cannot really benefit from Calcium unless they have adequate Boron, and plants cannot really benefit from Boron, unless they have adequate Calcium. Second point is that Molybdenum is especially important for legumes (as it is part of the process by which the rhizobia can fix atmospheric Nitrogen to make it available to our gardening system), but these rhyzobia ALSO need Cobalt, generally not considered a plant essential nutrient. On my farm, Cobalt is not likely to be short (because I feed it in a supplement to my Livestock) but it might be something to consider if your legumes are not nodulating effectively
Thank you so much for this video. I am a beginner Gardener with lots of enthusiasm. but as you can imagine, coming up against leaves changing colour. I will look out for more of your videos.
One thing to also consider, if the soil PH is too high or to low, the different minerals have issues depending on whether or not the PH is high or low. Most plants do well with a ph between 7 and 5.5. Outside of thy range, and issues arise. So the liberal might be there, but it is not accessible due to improper PH. And then we throw biology in the mix, which makes the nutrients available to plant like through what called nutrient cycling. Lost of info to be discussed here. But you do a great job at showing and explaining the different deficiencies through the photos chosen. I commend you. And I give thanks for the info.
Can you share resources on nutrient cycling? Any authors? Articles? Thanks!!
We could include a lot of things. The topic of plant nutrition was covered very well.
That's exactly what I was going to say 👍🌿🍏🤘
I'm currently studying Permaculture, there is just so much information...
I like Kevins tips regardless, however Idont believe a regular farmer does soil test. The food most farmers produce taste like it was grown on alkaline soil where phosphorous isnt avaiable. Its tasteless and big nothing more. Like its made to cover a fake demand
Ammonia for nitrogen.
Diammonium phosphate for phosphorous.
Banana peels or wood ash for potassium.
Three wonderful ingredients for a great fertilizer.
Thank you Kevin , this was very informative . A big help for my plants is to not misdiagnose if I think there's a problem .
There are factors to consider when looking at exactly what you use to provide your soil with a full array of nutrients. One of them that was not mentioned was pH. An acid soil that you want to keep acid might get powdered sulfur, magnesium sulfate solution, and calcium sulfate. These things will either be neutral or acid in reaction to the soil and provide Calcium, Sulphur and Magnesium as well. In alkaline soil, they would tend to lower the pH. If you have soil that needs the pH raised a bit and needs Calcium, Magnesium, and sulfur, Dolomitic limestone has both magnesium and calcium in it and Calcium sulfate provides calcium and sulfur. The limestone also raises the pH. The interplay between pH and nutrient availability is something good to understand. This also helps you choose sources of nutrients that go with the pH you have and like or change the pH toward what you want. Calcium Sulphate is also good for loosening hard clay soil and helping repair salt damage. Various organic fertilizers can raise, lower or work well with your existing pH. It's good to learn about these things and the info is readily available. This was a good presentation. I liked the symptoms of deficiencies and how they were portrayed and described.
I've seen all of these at one time or another, never knew they were experiencing deficiencies. This put so many puzzle pieces together for me, thank you 👍
Your second magnesium on your list was probably meant to be manganese.
The reason magnesium was on the list twice is likely because someone meant to write manganese, since that is an essential element needed for a plant to thrive
I learned more from you in this video than all of the book I read on gardening.
This is so fascinating! I had no idea about all of this intricate nutrients. VERY helpful with the pictures showing the deficiencies. Thanks
Love the leaf pictures!! So helpful! Thanks mate👍
Of course!
11:00 I hooked up a copper pipe to my rDWC system and the copper leeched into the nutrients and I got copper poisoning, I wound up losing a bunch of plants before I figured out what had happened.
I didn’t realize til this vid the relationship of Mg to Phosphorus, but that makes total sense in what I see at my hydroponic tomato farm. Yellowing first, then the red shortly after. Thank you!
Thank you MAN, a lot of growers ESPECIALLY BEGINNERS doesn't care about THE MICRO ELEMENTS OR THE MICROBIAL STUFF IN THE SOIL They just focus on NPK AND THE TYPE OF THE SOIL (I MEAN: COCO PEAT, PEATMOS, MEDIUM, POTTING SOIL, ETC....), and also of course ignoring the PH LEVELS, SO THANK GOD AND THANK YOU OF COURSE FOR YOUR EDUCATIONAL VIDEOS BUDDY ✌
Definitely the most helpful video I've seen in regards to nutrients. Saving this one for reference! So here's a return favor since you questioned the pronunciation of molybdenum. (you mostly had it right. lol)
mol•YB•de•NUM - you enunciate on the second and fourth syllables. Sounds like mo-LIB-den-UM.
It's crazy how much I've learnt about my own body through plants and plant nutrition
This is so true, and different plants need different amounts of each. My tomatoes need calcium whereas my lavender does not need as much if any. I'm so glad someone broke this down and explained it.
I took a picture of each one and am putting into a collage for easy identification! Thank you I really think this will help me to care for my garden more efficiently!
I know I'm late to the party but I have to say that I was looking for exactly this explanation when I started my search today. I wasted 20 mins of my time with all these random videos that just didn't explain it properly or at least to my understanding. I then came here. Even though I've been a subscriber for a few weeks I didn't look here first. For now on, i'm always coming here first. I learned so much from the other videos here that I really should start here all the time. This was exactly what I needed to learn in more ways than one. Here's why I was searching for this.
I picked up some tomato plants from home depot. I've had them for about 7 days and the ones I haven't had a chance to transplant from soil to hydro yet have the lower leaves turning yellow and drying up. (I currently do not have nutrients in the ones I transplanted). I've been giving them tap water every few days. (no nutrients or PH adjustment) My first search to try to find out why said " it's either to much or to little water" WHAT?! How does that help me? Anyway, tomorrow they are getting added to the DWC and i'll be adding the nutrients. I'm hoping the GH 3 part I have takes care of what they need . The PH in my city water is high even after adding nutrients, so I'm adjusting that too. I'm hoping getting them in water with the nutrients will help resolve their issues.
Your channel should be called Professor of Epic Gardening or Epic Gardening Master Class.
I too bought plants from HD and Loews- they all died except for two eggplant. They are large but no blooms. I'm in zone 9b- its really difficult :(
Thanks for the simple explanation with pictures to clearly see symptoms. Much appreciated!
Very nicely explained starting from basics. Next question is how to (detailed step by step procedure) add each of fertilizers and micro nutrients to the soil or water (hydroponics) ? Which all are the good testing instruments available in market place to test presence (means absence) of each one of it.
I loved this video. I often am confused about what is wrong with my garden. I get tiny dark spots in my fruit tree leaves and was told by a local nursery it was iron deficiency but that appears incorrect based on the information here...!!?? Also the Word Molybdenum... I was taught to use the following trick to remember how it is pronounced “My Lips are numb” ..... (moe lib de numb). Thank you for this video
If you want to know what's wrong with your plants consult your local university extension service, imo. Mine takes samples for a 10 dollar fee, which they say is just to discourage too many samples, but they talk for free. With a BS in Plant Biology, a pesticide license, and 20 years in the field- I still took samples to those who knew better than I (plants are now just my passion, not my job anymore). Necrotic lesions aren't just from nutrients.
edit: I've seen people pump up nutrients so many times because they mistook disease for a nutrient problem. Living in New England, almost every problem I see with fruit trees is disease/site related, not a nutrient issue.
Awesome video man I love it when people share real knowledge! It is definitely a lot to ingest but well worth the time to learn how to keep your garden fine-tuned. I've always been a fan of Harley Smith and he's with the NPK University. Just a treasure Trove of knowledge!
You'll notice Iron deficiencies first when your soil pH is too high because its the first be become unavailable at higher pH's, top of the plant will be really slow stunted and yellower than the bottom leaves
Thank you EG, this is a really good video. Shows you exactly what to look for in terms of nutrient deficiencies but also the importance of trace elements. This cannot be emphasised enough. Having been in the Diamond Exploration business for over 45 years, over that time I learned that ANY volcanic rock extrusions but in particular Kimberlites (in which diamonds occur), if crushed sufficiently fine enough (say around 0.1mm or less) are sooooooo beneficial to plants when applied as a supplement. It's like enabling vegetative growth on steroids. Well done mate. Brilliant.
Interesting, is this sold as a byproduct of diamond mining?
@@garethbaus5471 Not exactly. It is a byproduct of mineral processing (usually as microfine sludge) discarded to landfill. One of the haulage contractors that used to truck away our sludge was also a horticulturist who used it for his property and reported great results.
@@CountBasie56 ok thanks for the information.
This was awesome! Very timely for me as I’ve just done my first soil test and things are waaay out of whack!. Thanks!
Most videos are talking good sense of deficiencies. But part of the gardening problems could be overdosing for those who are new and showed too much care. I am one.
I learn knowledge and experience from you all and looking forward to learn the subject and effects of overdosing.
You r right...it's really confusing.....thanks for making this video
Many people create content on that topic and I really appreciate your work! But could you please also make a follow-up video on how to amend deficient soils in an organic farming context? I'm not talking compost, PH, etc. ... I would like to know how to add e.g. Boron when a Boron deficiency has been detected if you are an organic gardener.
Try a bit of azomite
The video covers almost everything, with my arguments cheers.
Nutrient deficiencies are fascinating, the way they all work together. Wanting to understand more opened up a new and endless world of soil science to explore 🙏
So great! Thank you for your hard work putting all these videos together. I have been subscribed for a few months and you’ve helped me save a lot of plants! Cheers!
Very nicely explained...you explained the small nuances that help identify some of the lesser known deficiencies from the big three which often look similar. Thank you so much!
Happy you enjoyed it!
It’s a really easy build with scrap boards that you may have left over from other projects and when you paint it
Man.....this is really awesome information. I've had curly spinach leaf, and purple tomato leaves, but these were a purple variety so still not sure about that one plant.
I don't count nutrients as I have always used organic gardening methods and I don't mean those organic pellets from the store. I just compost and cover with straw. I get some council wood chips and leaves and compost those with urine. I also add wood ash and char to the compost. I rarely have pests. I companion plant because It self seeds a lot. I also grow cover plants that I let die and rot, like raddish, clover and peas.
I have had curly leaf on a peach tree last year, but it's come back ok this year, just cut it back hard and got rid of the ants that were spreading it. It was them or harlequin bugs. I dust elemental sulphur with diatamacious earth and burdock root for a pesticide and my spinach, bracicas and cellery come up really dark green, so that makes sense.
I found that synthetic nutrients may not always mean chemically made. it could mean the organic mater has been broken down in the way the plant can up take.
This is a darn good video. Micro-nutrient deficiencies are interesting in that certain ones are more apt to occur in certain plants and in certain soil conditions and localities. Here in Southern California for instance avocados are prone to zinc deficiency which shows up as rounded as opposed to pointed leaves. On my trees I broadcast Zinc Sulfate at about 1 lb per inch of tree diameter every 4-5 years. I'm really interested in cheating agents like EDTA which should allow plants to take up micronutrients easier. I've used a synthetic called Grow-More in 20-20-20 which is a water soluble product that contains micronutrients as well. It's also available in several different N-P-K ratios depending on the plant need. That product along with elimination of high amounts of interference elements like Chlorine seem to supply a pretty good balance of micronutrients as well as understanding the local water and soil and which Moros are apt to be deficient.
Good tip on the avocados and thanks for the kind words. I too live in SoCal, so you better believe I'm going to take that zinc sulfate tip to heart.
Big Papi why do you broad cast so much and wait 5 yrs ? Just curious on reason I’m in SoCal to.
No it's not. This video is filled with wrong facts. You want to start understanding what plants need you need to understand what happens in soil in nature.
What's an organic way to increase phosphorus in the soil? I use coffee to increase nitrogen, banana for potassium, egg powder for calcium; what would help with phosphorus?
Seaweed extract it contains nitrogen and phosphorus:)
@@gabeolson-jensen8676 sensational, will try it out - thanks Gabe!
BPLH no problem please let me know how it goes.
You can get elemental phosphorus rock which works as well
Are you recommending that we test container soil as well? I just use a balanced blend of compost, peat, and an quality bag mix. I don't like use the garden soil that we have available locally and my own soil is just gravelly-silt. Not too much going on in that stuff.
Charcoal is also needed and carbon it’s not on the list
But garlic is for fungicide so it needs to be in the compost. This includes sea salt water to deter pestilence and insecticide.
Wow this is great! So complete and so well stated and the emphasis on the most important and most likely telltales in the garden and their causes. Really excellent, thank you so much!
Avery helpful video helps me in completing my project.
Quick question. Would all of these deficiencies be solved by having a good compost? Would composted vegetables, fruits, grass ect. have all of these nutrients?
My understanding is that while really good compost will have some of most of them, that even really good compost won't have *enough* of most of them. And what exactly your soil+compost will have will vary between areas.
@@MirrimBlackfox I see only a soil test will verify that then thanks.
Hi,
There 's sooooo much to learn from you! Please keep it coming. By the way, you shocked me when you indicated that you 're not a formal plant scientist.🤔
Interesting vid- but I've learned from soil biologists that the soil has all of those elements- it may not be bioavailable to your plants when there isn't adequate symbiotic interaction between the microbes and roots. The cheapest and best long-term way to benefit your plants is to increase those bacteria and fungi, which will attract all other parts of soil food web (nematodes, arthropods, worms, etc.)To do that, most recommend compost tea and more live roots in the soil (cover crops and even weeds sometimes). Makes sense.
Depends on your geology and soil age/history. It's pretty cheap at the garden level to do a soil test and balance the minerals in your garden to ensure your veggies, in association with soil biotic processes, are packed full of what your body needs.
COMMENT
COMMENT
BLUE BIKE 🚲🎥🚳🚲🎥
COMMENT
SLAB
RUN
WALK
JOG
HOMICIDE
Constituents of soils which are easily leached by rain and taken up by plants are stored (A-only in the organic fraction of the soil
B-in all parts of the soil
C-on the exchange sites of the organic and clay components
D-in the silicate fraction of the soil)
Which is the correct answer please
I’ve noticed that there are no fertilisers or micro nutrient additives in Australia that contain Chloride. If someone were to grow with an inert substrate like rock wool, all the plants would have a Chloride deficiency.
Thank you for the detail. I am a beginner gardener the video is very direct and informative. Much needed. 👍🏽
Thanks for this video! Very helpful and a nice summery. However you didn’t go into water and photosynthesis, I know it’s easily overlooked but actually a huuuuge part of plant nutrition, I read recently that plants only get about 5 percent of their nutrients form the earth!!!! Most of it is from photosynthesis. Burn a plant and analyse the ash and there will be oxygen, nitrogen, carbon and hydrogen - all present in the air. Something to consider I think when talking about plant nutrition.
Fun fact the patterns on leaves, branch, roots, even lightning are all called Lichtenburg figures. Some really cool art done with them in experiements.
Great video is very useful. Now that I know what my plants are deficient in. How do I fix each problem? Which brands do you recommend for nitrogen, magnesium, and potassium? Its all different plants.
This was a great education! Much appreciated. Is there a community or forum that helps people figure out which deficiencies their plant is experiencing from pictures?
well the sad part is that most of these symptoms are also caused by fungus or bacterial or virus or nematode diseases so what i suggest is to be careful if there are other signs on other parts of the plants example on stem or flowers so that you don't only focus on the symptoms showing on the leaves
Thank you! Awesome nutrient video! Love that you go beyond NPK
watching this, i'm realizing what was going on with some of my plants last year! putting a lot more work into my soil this time around.
Not sure if this is a stupid question or smart question: can you dissolve vitamin supplements in water and feed them to your plants (or rather is it a bad idea)?
I grow outdoors in soil. What should my water ph be? My water is 7.0 out of the tap. Also what ph should my water with food be? I use liquid nutrients.
Does this pertain to potting mix as well? I have used my potting mix for three years and Im pretty sure all my pots are spent. 13 tomato plants with only 4 tomatoes.
How about you make video in creating a complete fertilizer using this info?
Do a video about Alocasia care, so many myths about them. Please show me how to properly love my plant.
I love how educational you are and you have a good pedagogy! Teaching seems to be a calling to u
Well I learnt a new word today. Never heard of Pedagogy.
And learnt lol
There are zero pages about pons and cannibas. That would help many including me. How much to feed max minimum and how to come to a conclusion on how much and when. Hello
I grow creasote in minnesota which needs toxic soil to help with plant shock so I actually mix in chromium to potting mix and sand recreate caliche toxicity.
9:26 My tomato plant looked exactly like this, so I must have a chlorine deficiency… how do I, or what to add to the soil to help with it?
Also with the magnesium!?
I wonder if my loquat trees leaves were dying and turning brown due to nutrient deficiency or if they die quick like that naturally. Thank you for specific explanations
Very comprehensive and well structured. I will be checking out the site for sure!
Hi there, I reside in LA sub-tropical zone 9. Tks for info on yellow leaves. Very helpful! I'm wondering about my Gardenia bushes which are 3+ yrs. They flower beautifully and are quite fragrant when blooming. Many of their leaves are now turning yellow. Do I try feeding them Nitrogen? I don't recall them yellowing this much in the past. Is it too late to fertilize once more prior to winter. Help please! Tks.
You point out that you have Magnesium twice in the list. One of them should be Manganese. I see that has been fixed in the linked blog post but it hasn't been changed in the video description.
So in short: when you buy fertilizer, majority of it is empty filling. Also when you plant flowers and basil under your tomato, you are very meticulously fertilizing your tomato for fruit, your flowers for flowering and your basil for leaves. You use a pipet dropper to not mess up your other plants right next to each other ;)
Great job!! Thanks for sharing. I just got started on hydroponic lettuces and I noticed their leafs got some little brown dots, what could be happening? Is everything ok? Should I worry?
ok - great information. But what do we need to do once we identify them? Will be really helpful if you can let us know what we need to add - for instance, calcium can be added through eggshells.
Hello my name is Peri I'm a grower on Kauai. I planted some artichokes and its not budding? what am i doing wrong?
I understand it changes depending on where the life cycle of the plant is, and for that matter what plant etc etc.
I’m just curious if I put 10 10 10 is that a hot mix? Not sure what percent of nutes my soil should be.
would lazy man's compost tea (handful composting scraps in bucket of water, let sit a few weeks, no bubbler) give all the nutrients needed? I also have "cow pond tea" made like lazy compost tea, but using what was found in a cow pond and a kitchen few scraps? so far my plants love it
Although I am using dry amendments so does it even matter since I’m feeding the soil?
I have some plants issue, however, it seems not similar from the above. My plant is growing tall but from bottom to the top, the leaves are getting tiny and tiny, the shape also curve outward
Thank you for keeping us knowledgeable about this!
love the instructional videos like this also! #1 king of the Garden Content!
is putting ash in a soil good or bad? my dad keeps putting his ash in the garden from his wood burner... but quite a lot.. huge piles of ash & charcoal all over the garden from years of burning wood..
I am a hydroponic farmer and i usually find the recepie for npk and macro nutrients but never for micro. Why is that? What is the ideal method to decide the quantity micro in a plant?
My plants are yellowing in the veins, new growth, rest of plant is very nice, large, massive growth noticable every two days...any ideas? Thanks for the videos!
Bit random but here because I have a gcse biology exam tomorrow, this helped a bunch cheers :)
Rip steez!
Reflection yeh buddy ㄣ⃒
I'm new to gardening really and learning so much still. Love your videos.
What causes the leaves to become crispy and dried even when the soil is soaked? Is it a heat issue?