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Is it right to use immature fertilizer to raise flowers

Marie Schrader
2020-07-30 08:42:15
There are flower lovers who often bury their eggs, chicken, duck and fish in the soil. It is said that they can add nutrition to plants. Is this reasonable? Let's talk about the right and wrong of applying immature fertilizer.

The result of applying unripe fertilizer to flowers

Many results show that flowers are more suitable for mature fertilizer. Applying immature fertilizer will cause certain damage to flowers, such as scalding the root system of flowers, causing lack of oxygen in the soil, even leading to the death of plants.

flowers

Why not use immature fertilizer

We all know that the growth of flowers needs to absorb the nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, iron and so on which are fermented in the soil and dissolved in the water. It seems that immature fertilizer also has these elements, but in fact, rotten food is directly buried in the soil without fermentation. When it is fermented, it will produce high temperature and harmful gases, which are likely to burn the root system of flowers. In addition, these rotten substances may breed a large number of harmful microorganisms, which will compete with plants for oxygen when they are active, causing soil hypoxia, and then wither and die. Death. In addition, during the fermentation process, these sapropels will emit unpleasant gases, attract insects and flies, and harm the health of flower plants.

Some people will bury the bodies of some small animals next to the plants, which is also not advisable. It will harm the growth of plants, but also affect the environmental health. It is recommended to bury them in the soil about one meter deep to let the bodies rot.

Can't use undecomposed fertilizer.

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The Plant Aide - Plant experts around you

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