1 Tbs pulverized egg shells (coffee/spice grinder) and 1 Tbs distilled vinegar. Combine, let foam for about 30 min. Add to 1 gallon of water. Calcium is now bio available. Water your plants with it.
Thanks, Tina Marie. I learned this from Old Alabama Gardener. I used it when some beautiful Amish Paste volunteer tomatoes started to get blossom end rot, along with several others of the thirty tomato varieties we grew this year. I let the baked, ground egg shells/vinegar mixture foam up, waited about 30 minutes, and divided it around all of our plants, more on the plants already showing affected fruits. Then I watered well around the base of the plants. In less than 2 weeks there was evidence that there were no new fruits with BER, and the fruits that had already shown the black spots on their blossom ends actually had the rot stopped! Very impressive.
My grandmother dug coffee grounds and eggshells into her rose garden every morning after breakfast. For fifty years. She had beautiful roses nearly all of the year, no insect problems, and she never put any chemicals on the roses.
Egg shells will cause your blender container to get scratched up. I use an electric spice/coffee grinder and it works great! Will break down shells to powder!
I do the same thing. First I dry the eggshells over the pilot light, then I pulverize them in the coffee grinder. I tend to use them around my nightshades.
I picked up a blender at a garage sale after the DW had a few comments about me using "hers". I dry the eggshells in the sun and then pulverize them. I also use the blender for soft kitchen scraps and weeds which I add to a bucket of water which sits for a day or so before adding to the garden or the compost.
BRAND NEW / newbie (patio/ containers) 'gardener" here - this is BY FAR the Best🎉 , Most explanatory, coffee grounds, eggshells, weathering etc, video I've seen. Thank You!!!
One word of caution about coffee grounds is that they still contain caffeine, which can stunt the growth of some seedlings. Coffee grounds work better around mature plants that are already established, or as a compost ingredient. The earthworms love it, and I've noticed they move a lot faster as a result.
Ours works well. We add diced up banana peels too. We use a vitamix machine and it emulsifies it. We add half the pitcher to two gallons of water in our watering can. We do it about every 2 weeks and we get large harvests. 🤷♀️😁
I’ve been keeping banana peels in a jar and add water to it.. when the flowers started falling off of my pepper plants I too the jar of peels and water, poured out about two cups into a five gallon bucket and used a small sour cream container and water the base of each pepper plant... that was two weeks ago now and I have the largest cayenne peppers growing! Thought I would share this .. I’m going to do what you’ve done by dicing the bananas then add them into the jar and add the water! Thanks for the tip!!
I only use coffee grounds and egg shells in my compost pile, that way I know they have already had time to breakdown and are better suited to add to my garden.
I throw eggshells and coffee grounds directly onto my garden plot all your long. In the spring it gets tilled in, during the growing season it gets layered on top of the garden with the grass clippings I put on the garden. This is the second year of my garden, started with a Bermuda grass yard last year, and my plants are doing so much better this year.
I watched a video from a woman who brought a plant back to life with plain ol' coffee. The plant looked amazing, as it was almost dead, apparently. So, now, every morning I take my leftover (from making one cup) grounds and put them into a glass coffee carafe I use for a lot of purposes, and I fill it up with water and the leftover bit of grounds. The water is a light tan. I water my plants with it, and dump the grounds there, too. I have noticed in the past two days, after four days of doing this, that the plants have perked up and the leaves have turned dark green. I don't want to overdo it, so will try to space it out over a couple of weeks before adding what amounts to a "tea" again. A coffee tea. Who would have thought?
My question has already been answered in the comments. I sure didn’t know about salmonella in the shells and thanks for that. I got some endrot in my tomatoes last year and solved it with cheap antacid tab’s ground into a powder then soaked overnight in water and poured around the plants. I received results almost immediately. Not a blemish one on the next setting.
Thank you so much for taking the time away from your own family to help us take care of ours with your knowledge, tips and tricks. I know your family is blessed to have you work so hard on what us placed on the table. Thank you so much for sharing with us 🙏🏼🤍
Love this info! I have coffee grounds! But beware of eggshells in the blender. They dull the blades so either get one from the thrift store, or pound them with the flat side of a mallet or in a mortar and pestle.
@MIgardener I use coffee in my garden from time to time. Instead of grounds I usually take a cup of leftover coffee and dilute it with a gallon of water. I use it on my blueberries and greens. They seem to like it. Am I harming my plants in any way? I use the grounds around my greens whenever I see slugs and snails. Something about the coffee keeps them away. Thank you Luke ...love your channel. I always learn something here.
I put everything into the soil in the fall and let the worms take care of it. They really get to work until mid November and return around early April. The only thing that persists is the odd chicken bone sticking out of the soil.
@@theurzamachine I take all the leftover bones from previous meals, and when I cookout over the grill, I throw the bones IN the fire. After the ashes are cool, the bones are easily crumbled by hand into the soil. Lotsa minerals.
Thanks for reiterating these facts. I see posts weekly where gardeners are instructed to put egg shells in their garden to fix BER. They will argue with you and tell you that you don't know what you are talking about. I just tell them to educate themselves.
I have an Oster that I bought for $19.95 at Walmart, and I use it to powder eggshells, charcoal and old rotten drywall. I will occasionally run chicken bones through it as well. It works great! I thought for sure I would bend the blades, but it has held up very well, despite running some burn-pile charcoal through it that occasionally sparked as I hit a missed nail or something. I did NOT know that about the salmonella and egg shells; great info, thanks!
Well done again. Over time. This is by no means the first time you use these words because quite frankly, there is no snappy way to get things done when dealing with our soil. As for myself I prefer composting the materials mentioned by making a hot compost pile. Best way of getting nitrogen and calcium plant available sooner, and even then we cannot forget these 2 words , over time since it’s not happening overnight.
My grandfather always burried coffee grounds, raw veggie & fruit scraps, and egg shells to the compost bin for years. He had several bins and areas. Large logs laying on the ground in a pile, a compost bin for smaller branches, one bin that he added his scraps to, and one compost that was almost perfect that as he needed it we screened it to make sure big stuff wasn't still in there before using it. I have yet to get where he was!
I add all year long every year. Works great 😁 I grow beneficial nitrogen plants around my others like clover and toss all kinds of compost below the soil as soon as the ground unfreezes
I've read that you can breakdown eggshells in apple cider vinegar and in a few weeks it will create calcium solution that can be readily available to your plants. It does need to be diluted with water, tho.
Thank you so much for the advice about the semanella with the eggshells I had no idea I'm new to gardening and I have been grounding my exhales into powder but I did not know to bake them 1st so thank you thank you there
I make a tea like fertilizer. I take Banana peels. Instant coffee, Epsom salt and lots of water and let it sit in a two litter bottle. I take crushed eggs shells when I setup my containers and add eggshells and my fert tea to the soil in the pots over the winter and let it sit under my uv lights with my plants that I allow to grow indoors over the harsh minnesota winters
My nightcrawlers and redworms take care of these things faster, I like to mix the coffee with rockdust and everything else especially kale plant thick stems. Worms also love the eggshells whole, because I noticed they like to shak up in it. Like a worm motel.
I put crushed eggshells in my raised beds to keep the cats from using it as a litter box. It works. I notice birds seem to like them and I've seen some of the shells get carried off by them. After the plants start coming up the cats have usually started avoiding the boxes. One cat still doesn't care and will lay on some of my plants. So this year I'm going to try putting plastic forks prongs up around the borders and plants.
I use dried egg shells when making coffee each morning. I keep a can to empty the coffee grounds/eggs shells into and when it's full, I add it to one of my gardens. We have clay soil here and anything to loosen it up is welcome. I also add the soggy spruce needles that collect in the house gutters. LOL. The flowers and veggies seem to like it.
I honestly use fish food as well. I make a mix of tea leaves bc I dont drink coffee sugar eggshells gind them up together. To me it works my first year hollyhocks are 5 feet tall. The leaves are bigger than my head. They definitely will be a good 8 ft tall next season. I'm so excited to see it.
Thank you for this! So tired if hearing about eggs under tomatoes to help them. I did try and never worked. I add eggshell and coffee year round to the same raised beds and started to worry about raising the acidity. Had noticed coffee grounds didn't seem to help with leaf growth like I thought it should. This explains alot. Thanks again!!!
Wow!! I have been making eggshell powder, and Did not know this, it's bagged up and I thought was ready for use, is it possible to put it in the airfryer, if nit I will of course figure out a way, possible the grill and and using a cookie tray, thank you, such an amazing channel, East of Cadillac so your my go to expert Now!!! God bless you!!
My game plan is to have 3 soil piles, 1 will be used while 1 is breaking down (composting) 1 will be the add material to pile. Then rotate out the garden beds or buckets soil every year, taking the used soil out to make it the next composting pile then fill with the second pile.
Coffee grounds and eggshells...I throw both into the oven and / or dehydrator until VERY DRY. They're much easier to powder down with my huge rolling pin when they're dried. After powdered, I add them to my composter.
Not sure what kind of compost set up you have but you're better off skipping the oven and letting them break down naturally in the compost. Grinding the egg shells or any matter you add to compost is key tho
I actually grind the shells and grounds in a magic bullet to fine dust, it seems to work better with nutrient uptake. Your tums solution is something I just tried, too soon for noticeable results.
Do I use cleaned egg shells or fresh cracked straight to water for soaking to use for plants? I have fiddle leaf figs, a majesty palm, money tree and the peace lily!
in November every year, I take my leaves and run them twice through my mulching vacuum tool then add directly to soil (8ft x 16ft garden) - then spread some coffee grounds, dig out the summer worth of ash/dirt from my fire pit and then run the tiller and churn it all together before the first snow. sits all winter and then till again before planting in spring - gets me good zuccini, summer squash and tomaters. every other year i add 2 big bricks of new dirt and same amount of Peat moss. pretty healthy dirt. should i add other stuff?
Put one tablespoon of eggshell powder into a pitcher and add two tablespoons of white vinegar to it, after you've done that, stir this up and leave this mixture over night, what will happen is that the calcium will be converted into a form of calcium that will de solve into water making it available for the plants to take it up. So after a night of converting you need to add one liter of water to this mixture and stir it through before giving it to the plants.
I always pulverize my eggshells after sterilizing them in the oven. If I have banana peels I dry them and grind them up to add to my veggie beds for a hit of Potassium along with the Calcium. Sometimes I add white vinegar to the eggshells and leave it overnight. It is then strained and added at the rate of one tablespoon per litre of water. This makes a really fast acting calcium foliar spray.
So you mentioned coffee and no affect on ph.. though you didn’t mention the ph on eggshells.. it’s often said that eggshells play a role on raising the ph??? You are *extremely informative on all the information..
Thanks for this. I've been having a persistent problem with coffee grounds in the compolst pile. First week or so, the pile heats up nicesly. But after two weeks at most, it totally cools off. Should I be worried?
There was a study done by the Alabama agriculture extension I believe the name was, they found that coarsely ground egg shells performed roughly just as well as ag lime. And finely ground shells outperformed pure calcium carbonate as far as putting readily available for uptake calcium in the soil goes. My blossom end rot never came back after trying it
I use the Egg water when I make Egg salad and such. Let it completely cool, and put it on the plants. My research shows that about 25% of the calcium does leach into the water when boiled for a while. It seems to work like a charm.
I just add them every year, so this year was getting nutrients that I added last year, this year's egg shells and grounds will give nutrients next year and so on. Also, add Corbon to it as well. The cardboard tube from toilet paper rolls are great or any brown paper bags.
I add those to my compost system, and when I grow my tomatoes, (mostly in big pots of potting soil/compost, because we have really heavy clay soil), I bury a small chunk of Ca/Mg supplement pills from the drug store into each pot, near the roots, and do not have blossom end rot anymore.
Soil amendment is a long term program. The key is to do it and keep adding these and other long term items each and every year. What you put in today is for the next year or two.
1 Tbs pulverized egg shells (coffee/spice grinder) and 1 Tbs distilled vinegar. Combine, let foam for about 30 min. Add to 1 gallon of water. Calcium is now bio available. Water your plants with it.
It has stopped tomatoe blight for me. Also use it in my potted plants.
I hear that you need to ferment for 2 days?🤔 is it good for the leaves and soil?
Thanks, Tina Marie. I learned this from Old Alabama Gardener. I used it when some beautiful Amish Paste volunteer tomatoes started to get blossom end rot, along with several others of the thirty tomato varieties we grew this year. I let the baked, ground egg shells/vinegar mixture foam up, waited about 30 minutes, and divided it around all of our plants, more on the plants already showing affected fruits. Then I watered well around the base of the plants. In less than 2 weeks there was evidence that there were no new fruits with BER, and the fruits that had already shown the black spots on their blossom ends actually had the rot stopped! Very impressive.
Do you spray the leaves or just water at the base?
@@kathleenray1827 water the base
I think of my compost pile as another crop (soil) so things like coffee grounds and eggshells are fertilizer for my compost. 😉
This. Organic matter goes into compost pile. Compost goes into garden.
Ppl make so complicated.......I don't get it.
I use bamboo leaf and Amaranth leaf for my compost and vegetables grow up fast
@@Ssen0nesS exactly, people always ask what i feed my plants i say i've never fed my plants in the last decade or so, but i feed my soil all the time.
Luke doesn't try and be a wonderful awesome teacher He just is! A wonderful awesome teacher!
My grandmother dug coffee grounds and eggshells into her rose garden every morning after breakfast. For fifty years. She had beautiful roses nearly all of the year, no insect problems, and she never put any chemicals on the roses.
I add banana peels to a blender with water and my roses love them also!
Me too
My grandma did that and added little bit beer
@@jamien7806that's just the excuse she used to sneak a beer out of the house🙂
Egg shells will cause your blender container to get scratched up. I use an electric spice/coffee grinder and it works great! Will break down shells to powder!
Also, I baked my eggshells ONLY 1 time. It caused my house to stink so bad that I will never do that again.
I do the same thing. First I dry the eggshells over the pilot light, then I pulverize them in the coffee grinder. I tend to use them around my nightshades.
I do that too. My egg shells get dispersed between me, the chickens and the compost. I need to eat more eggs! 😁
Thanks for that info.!
I picked up a blender at a garage sale after the DW had a few comments about me using "hers". I dry the eggshells in the sun and then pulverize them. I also use the blender for soft kitchen scraps and weeds which I add to a bucket of water which sits for a day or so before adding to the garden or the compost.
BRAND NEW / newbie (patio/ containers) 'gardener" here - this is BY FAR the Best🎉 , Most explanatory, coffee grounds, eggshells, weathering etc, video I've seen. Thank You!!!
That is the best explanation I have ever heard all time. I just Subscribed
One word of caution about coffee grounds is that they still contain caffeine, which can stunt the growth of some seedlings. Coffee grounds work better around mature plants that are already established, or as a compost ingredient. The earthworms love it, and I've noticed they move a lot faster as a result.
That’s funny to me! Ha ha. The worms seem to move faster, my morning chuckle. Thanks.
@@desertflower9557 give them worms a little extra shigglen in their wiggle..
Earthworm: eats coffee once
Im fast as fck boi
@@spadetheace5934 try and be productive and you will feel better.
😂
I've been putting used coffee grounds around my pepper plants the last 2 years, and they have been loving it.
Thank you for that. Ginger likes it too.
Ours works well. We add diced up banana peels too. We use a vitamix machine and it emulsifies it. We add half the pitcher to two gallons of water in our watering can. We do it about every 2 weeks and we get large harvests. 🤷♀️😁
I’ve been keeping banana peels in a jar and add water to it.. when the flowers started falling off of my pepper plants I too the jar of peels and water, poured out about two cups into a five gallon bucket and used a small sour cream container and water the base of each pepper plant... that was two weeks ago now and I have the largest cayenne peppers growing! Thought I would share this .. I’m going to do what you’ve done by dicing the bananas then add them into the jar and add the water! Thanks for the tip!!
Do the banana peels need to be rotten?
I only use coffee grounds and egg shells in my compost pile, that way I know they have already had time to breakdown and are better suited to add to my garden.
me too, or I bury them deep and just look at it as long term return not an immediate one.
Good information. I never have sterilized my egg shells, but I will now.
Thanks for explaining this for an amateur gardener
I throw eggshells and coffee grounds directly onto my garden plot all your long. In the spring it gets tilled in, during the growing season it gets layered on top of the garden with the grass clippings I put on the garden. This is the second year of my garden, started with a Bermuda grass yard last year, and my plants are doing so much better this year.
Thank you for this great info. I hadn't heard about sterilizing eggshells but it makes total sense.
I watched a video from a woman who brought a plant back to life with plain ol' coffee. The plant looked amazing, as it was almost dead, apparently. So, now, every morning I take my leftover (from making one cup) grounds and put them into a glass coffee carafe I use for a lot of purposes, and I fill it up with water and the leftover bit of grounds. The water is a light tan. I water my plants with it, and dump the grounds there, too. I have noticed in the past two days, after four days of doing this, that the plants have perked up and the leaves have turned dark green. I don't want to overdo it, so will try to space it out over a couple of weeks before adding what amounts to a "tea" again. A coffee tea. Who would have thought?
My question has already been answered in the comments. I sure didn’t know about salmonella in the shells and thanks for that. I got some endrot in my tomatoes last year and solved it with cheap antacid tab’s ground into a powder then soaked overnight in water and poured around the plants. I received results almost immediately. Not a blemish one on the next setting.
I never thought about salmonella on egg shells. Thank you for mentioning it.
Right! I was gonna skip the oven part!
Me neither about sampling spelling. But very important. I will put in the oven. Thanks lots.
Thank you so much for taking the time away from your own family to help us take care of ours with your knowledge, tips and tricks. I know your family is blessed to have you work so hard on what us placed on the table. Thank you so much for sharing with us 🙏🏼🤍
This is such useful and straightforward information so thank you so much 😊.
Love this info! I have coffee grounds! But beware of eggshells in the blender. They dull the blades so either get one from the thrift store, or pound them with the flat side of a mallet or in a mortar and pestle.
After blending into micro size I add to my worm bin.
My garden loves the added worm casting😁
@MIgardener I use coffee in my garden from time to time. Instead of grounds I usually take a cup of leftover coffee and dilute it with a gallon of water. I use it on my blueberries and greens. They seem to like it. Am I harming my plants in any way? I use the grounds around my greens whenever I see slugs and snails. Something about the coffee keeps them away. Thank you Luke ...love your channel. I always learn something here.
I was just going to say eventually shell and coffee add value. Good items to toss into a bed being put to rest in fall.
I put everything into the soil in the fall and let the worms take care of it. They really get to work until mid November and return around early April. The only thing that persists is the odd chicken bone sticking out of the soil.
@@theurzamachine I take all the leftover bones from previous meals, and when I cookout over the grill, I throw the bones IN the fire. After the ashes are cool, the bones are easily crumbled by hand into the soil. Lotsa minerals.
Thanks for reiterating these facts. I see posts weekly where gardeners are instructed to put egg shells in their garden to fix BER. They will argue with you and tell you that you don't know what you are talking about. I just tell them to educate themselves.
Another great vid. Been watching him for awhile and I live in his area ! So even better 8 )
found that adding eggshells and coffee grounds to the charcoal grill after I'm done cooking really helps and adds carbon to the mix.
I have an Oster that I bought for $19.95 at Walmart, and I use it to powder eggshells, charcoal and old rotten drywall. I will occasionally run chicken bones through it as well. It works great! I thought for sure I would bend the blades, but it has held up very well, despite running some burn-pile charcoal through it that occasionally sparked as I hit a missed nail or something. I did NOT know that about the salmonella and egg shells; great info, thanks!
You have clearly highlighted why you rotate 3-4 compost heaps, so you have a fresh batch each planting season.
Such helpful info Luke. Thanks for sharing that info. So important to know and can make a difference in our gardens.
Well done again. Over time. This is by no means the first time you use these words because quite frankly, there is no snappy way to get things done when dealing with our soil. As for myself I prefer composting the materials mentioned by making a hot compost pile. Best way of getting nitrogen and calcium plant available sooner, and even then we cannot forget these 2 words , over time since it’s not happening overnight.
For my compost now have I use bamboo leafs and some of Amaranths leaf 🍃 to make my vegetables growing up very fast
My grandfather always burried coffee grounds, raw veggie & fruit scraps, and egg shells to the compost bin for years. He had several bins and areas. Large logs laying on the ground in a pile, a compost bin for smaller branches, one bin that he added his scraps to, and one compost that was almost perfect that as he needed it we screened it to make sure big stuff wasn't still in there before using it. I have yet to get where he was!
I add all year long every year. Works great 😁 I grow beneficial nitrogen plants around my others like clover and toss all kinds of compost below the soil as soon as the ground unfreezes
I've read that you can breakdown eggshells in apple cider vinegar and in a few weeks it will create calcium solution that can be readily available to your plants. It does need to be diluted with water, tho.
I once added cheap coffee grounds strait to my soil….. killed everything 🤣🤣🤣 I didn’t know you had to use leftover grounds, not fresh ones 🤪
Thank you so much for the advice about the semanella with the eggshells I had no idea I'm new to gardening and I have been grounding my exhales into powder but I did not know to bake them 1st so thank you thank you there
I make a tea like fertilizer. I take Banana peels. Instant coffee, Epsom salt and lots of water and let it sit in a two litter bottle. I take crushed eggs shells when I setup my containers and add eggshells and my fert tea to the soil in the pots over the winter and let it sit under my uv lights with my plants that I allow to grow indoors over the harsh minnesota winters
Love this. There is always a debate in the Facebook garden group about coffee grounds.
Thanks my teacher
I grind shrimp shells and add to my compost. Not sure what it does but it feels right 😃
Great looking garden. ❤️ your channel.
Thanks for the information very helpful as I have lots of eggs and coffee grounds daily. Most go to my compost.
Can you let us know how much and how often you use both? And thank you so much for the great videos!😊
My nightcrawlers and redworms take care of these things faster, I like to mix the coffee with rockdust and everything else especially kale plant thick stems. Worms also love the eggshells whole, because I noticed they like to shak up in it. Like a worm motel.
I put crushed eggshells in my raised beds to keep the cats from using it as a litter box. It works. I notice birds seem to like them and I've seen some of the shells get carried off by them. After the plants start coming up the cats have usually started avoiding the boxes. One cat still doesn't care and will lay on some of my plants. So this year I'm going to try putting plastic forks prongs up around the borders and plants.
Lay briar brambles across thickly it will stop
Probably even a bunch of sticks stuck in the ground would help discourage them.
Thank you for the great information!
❤ your channel !!!
I use dried egg shells when making coffee each morning. I keep a can to empty the coffee grounds/eggs shells into and when it's full, I add it to one of my gardens. We have clay soil here and anything to loosen it up is welcome. I also add the soggy spruce needles that collect in the house gutters. LOL. The flowers and veggies seem to like it.
I honestly use fish food as well. I make a mix of tea leaves bc I dont drink coffee sugar eggshells gind them up together. To me it works my first year hollyhocks are 5 feet tall. The leaves are bigger than my head. They definitely will be a good 8 ft tall next season. I'm so excited to see it.
Thank you for this! So tired if hearing about eggs under tomatoes to help them. I did try and never worked. I add eggshell and coffee year round to the same raised beds and started to worry about raising the acidity. Had noticed coffee grounds didn't seem to help with leaf growth like I thought it should. This explains alot. Thanks again!!!
To summarize: Just. Be. Patient. 😊
On behalf of everyone. THANK YOU!
MORE LIKE LEAVE THE PLANTS ALONE
I put that stuff in my compost pile versus in with my plants.
Wow!! I have been making eggshell powder, and Did not know this, it's bagged up and I thought was ready for use, is it possible to put it in the airfryer, if nit I will of course figure out a way, possible the grill and and using a cookie tray, thank you, such an amazing channel, East of Cadillac so your my go to expert Now!!! God bless you!!
My game plan is to have 3 soil piles, 1 will be used while 1 is breaking down (composting) 1 will be the add material to pile. Then rotate out the garden beds or buckets soil every year, taking the used soil out to make it the next composting pile then fill with the second pile.
I put my coffee grounds and egg shells in my in garden worm tower. Works like a charm.
Super-helpful. Thank you!
great review on egg shell & grounds. A lit of my egg shells(after baking) go to my quail hens,
Coffee grounds and eggshells...I throw both into the oven and / or dehydrator until VERY DRY. They're much easier to powder down with my huge rolling pin when they're dried. After powdered, I add them to my composter.
Not sure what kind of compost set up you have but you're better off skipping the oven and letting them break down naturally in the compost. Grinding the egg shells or any matter you add to compost is key tho
I actually grind the shells and grounds in a magic bullet to fine dust, it seems to work better with nutrient uptake. Your tums solution is something I just tried, too soon for noticeable results.
Another good video. I love grazing the garden too. Yep, no cooties are going into the compost. 👌🏻✅🤛🏻
Very valuable information, thank you❣️
Thanks for the tips. Very helpful!👍🏽
Thank you so much for explaining this.
This was very helpful and very well explained.
Do I use cleaned egg shells or fresh cracked straight to water for soaking to use for plants? I have fiddle leaf figs, a majesty palm, money tree and the peace lily!
I have read a magnesium deficiency in plants looks like calcium deficiency. Epsom salt is water soluble and immediately available
Compost baby! Every once in a while I'll put my worms and put them in. Love your advice! Keeps me on my toes. Keep doing your vid.
Yes I have a worm farm.
in November every year, I take my leaves and run them twice through my mulching vacuum tool then add directly to soil (8ft x 16ft garden) - then spread some coffee grounds, dig out the summer worth of ash/dirt from my fire pit and then run the tiller and churn it all together before the first snow. sits all winter and then till again before planting in spring - gets me good zuccini, summer squash and tomaters. every other year i add 2 big bricks of new dirt and same amount of Peat moss. pretty healthy dirt. should i add other stuff?
Great advice
Thanks for the advice and truth
Thanks for this information
Put one tablespoon of eggshell powder into a pitcher and add two tablespoons of white vinegar to it, after you've done that, stir this up and leave this mixture over night, what will happen is that the calcium will be converted into a form of calcium that will de solve into water making it available for the plants to take it up.
So after a night of converting you need to add one liter of water to this mixture and stir it through before giving it to the plants.
I put coffee grounds around my milkweeds to keep the aphids off. Works great.
Thanks that was a good overview
Good tips,thank you.🙏
I throw the egg shells in the microwave for one minute and that makes them easier to crush and sterilizes them, happy gardening.
What about adding vinegar to the eggshells to break them down to calcium and carbon dioxide?
You read in my mind! 😱😱😱
I always pulverize my eggshells after sterilizing them in the oven. If I have banana peels I dry them and grind them up to add to my veggie beds for a hit of Potassium along with the Calcium. Sometimes I add white vinegar to the eggshells and leave it overnight. It is then strained and added at the rate of one tablespoon per litre of water. This makes a really fast acting calcium foliar spray.
Exactly why everything in my garden go's into my wood chipper in the fall . Then go's into my compost pile.
Very informative. Thank you.
So you mentioned coffee and no affect on ph.. though you didn’t mention the ph on eggshells.. it’s often said that eggshells play a role on raising the ph??? You are *extremely informative on all the information..
Thanks for this. I've been having a persistent problem with coffee grounds in the compolst pile. First week or so, the pile heats up nicesly. But after two weeks at most, it totally cools off.
Should I be worried?
There was a study done by the Alabama agriculture extension I believe the name was, they found that coarsely ground egg shells performed roughly just as well as ag lime. And finely ground shells outperformed pure calcium carbonate as far as putting readily available for uptake calcium in the soil goes. My blossom end rot never came back after trying it
Wonderful advise. Thank you so much!!
Agreed!
Wow that is beautiful amazing
Never mind you just answered my question!
Thank you and blessings...
I use the Egg water when I make Egg salad and such. Let it completely cool, and put it on the plants. My research shows that about 25% of the calcium does leach into the water when boiled for a while. It seems to work like a charm.
How about the water from boiled potatoes ,Do you use it as well?
Are those tender sweet cucumbers? My tender sweet cucumbers from your shop are growing great! Love them!
I just add them every year, so this year was getting nutrients that I added last year, this year's egg shells and grounds will give nutrients next year and so on. Also, add Corbon to it as well. The cardboard tube from toilet paper rolls are great or any brown paper bags.
Thank you very much
I added crushed eggshells once and watched them being taken away by ants. It was amazing.
LOOOL....:D I can imagine! Both that it would happen and that the only way to react is to stare.
Let 'em have them!! 😅
❤all the information!!!!
Glad it was helpful!
I add those to my compost system, and when I grow my tomatoes, (mostly in big pots of potting soil/compost, because we have really heavy clay soil), I bury a small chunk of Ca/Mg supplement pills from the drug store into each pot, near the roots, and do not have blossom end rot anymore.
I have used them in my carrot beds they do help but like you said not right away.
the only type of instant fertilizer I know of is the stuff like miracle grow that's mixed with water, everything else takes time to work.
Fish emulsion is immediate food, leafy compost teas
Soil amendment is a long term program. The key is to do it and keep adding these and other long term items each and every year. What you put in today is for the next year or two.
Great video!