View Full Version : How to fertilize when
shcisamax
03-02-2014, 02:40 PM
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Uptown Girl
03-02-2014, 04:01 PM
Most of the underlayment used has a weave that is water permeable, so any granular-type nutrients you might sprinkle will dissolve with rain or watering and travel down to the plants.
For most plants, the underlayment and rocks are usually placed with a little bit of wiggle room around each plant- you can safely push that back a bit if you think the plants would benefit…. I have done some of that, as hot rocks in summer can cook a plant if they are piled too close to the base or too high around the stems.
I use slow release fertilizer (Osmocote) on some flowering plants, liquid systemic (Bayer) fertilizer on others and granular acidic (Bougain) on others.
I also use Milorganite (granular) for our greenery (in between the professional, seasonal palm applications by Massey)
We eliminated our grass almost 3 years ago and except for a few small areas of ground cover, we have all rock now. Our flowering plants are thriving, our palms are deep green and all is well. :)
P.S. Resist putting the fertilizer right next to the stems. Think of your plant as an open umbrella- place the fertilizer around what they call 'the drip line'. That's where the feeder roots are. Oh- and more is not better. Follow the amount recommended for the best results… too frequent or too heavy an application wastes the product and can harm the beautiful plants you desire.
shcisamax
03-02-2014, 05:15 PM
I am afraid the hole around the step isn't wide enough that I could pull it back to the drip line. For that reason, I put the granules on the mat around the drip line. I was told I could use the Vigro for camelias, roses, and azaleas which is 10-8-8 could be used for all my shrubs and flowering plants. Hope that is right because I am going to be using it on the ligustrums as well.
angiefox10
03-02-2014, 05:57 PM
I am afraid the hole around the step isn't wide enough that I could pull it back to the drip line. For that reason, I put the granules on the mat around the drip line. I was told I could use the Vigro for camelias, roses, and azaleas which is 10-8-8 could be used for all my shrubs and flowering plants. Hope that is right because I am going to be using it on the ligustrums as well.
While I'm not an expert... I would consider Uptown Girl one. If you read her posts on gardening, you will find, she knows her stuff.
shcisamax
03-02-2014, 06:01 PM
Thanks for the recommendation Angie. Her explanation is pretty comprehensive. Clear she knows that she is talking about.
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