Sunday, April 18, 2010

Organic Fertilizer - Salt, Coffee Grounds, and Day Old Coffee Pump Up the Peppers By Laura Maness Brown

I love gardening. I'll plant vegetables anywhere. I also love using organic fertilizer and gardening products whenever possible. This past summer, we had more than our share of rain. My pepper plants did not seem to be doing well during the excessively rainy summer. Peppers like it hot, and they love sun. I had a wide variety of peppers, too, including bells, Tabasco, volcano, pimiento, jalapeno, sweet banana, and a few other varieties.

I tried using Miracle-Gro which was working fine on some of my other garden plants. I normally alternate among fertilizers, using organic fertilizer as often as possible. The peppers remained dull and listless, as if completely stuck. I switched over to fish emulsion, that really awful smelling yet highly effective fertilizer. Things improved slightly, but not enough to suit me.

I started doing some research and discovered two fertilizers that I had not yet tried. Amazingly enough, both products were ready available in my own home. The first "fertilizer" product I discovered was Epsom salts, more commonly known as magnesium sulfate.

I took a small handful of the Epsom salts and put them around the base of each pepper plant, and then I watered the salt into the soil. I repeated this process once weekly. The results were amazing.

At the same time, I also began to take our used coffee grounds and spread those around the plants as well. After a few days, I decided if the pepper plants liked coffee grounds, surely they would not have a problem with the excess coffee left in the pot, so I made sort of a "coffee tea" by diluting the left over coffee with a little water and applied that to the plants as well.

My husband and I could not believe the results. The plants bushed up and out, transforming into some of the most gorgeous, luscious pepper plants I've ever seen. We had to stake the plants to support the heavy pepper load. I have never, in all my years of gardening, had pepper plants produce that many peppers.

One thing that commonly happens when fertilizing vegetables is that you might get a lot of green leaf and plant growth without much vegetable production. That was not the case. These plants became abundantly loaded with peppers. I had to spend half days washing and slicing them so I could preserve them in the freezer.

One thing I noticed when using the Epsom salts on other garden plants, such as squash. Do not "throw" the fertilizer onto the vegetable plant leaves. Take the time to place it around the plant base, and then water it in. I made the mistake on a really hot day of trying to do a quick scatter. Some of the salts got on the squash leaves and the sun literally burned the leaves up.

I am still not sure if that was what caused the problem with the squash, but without more experimentation I personally recommend a plant base application and lightly watering in.

It could primarily be the Epsom salt, or it could primarily be the coffee grounds and "coffee tea" producing these outstanding results. Then again, it might be the combination of the two. Of course, the fertilizer is just a part of the gardening process. You can't expect miracles. Vegetables still require good soil, adequate sunlight, and sufficient water.

It is now late September, and the pepper plants are still lusciously green and loaded with peppers. I live in the Deep South so our growing season is a little longer than in some other locations. As long as we keep harvesting, those plants keep producing. We'll keep harvesting peppers until frost comes, I suppose! From now on, my pepper plants will drink coffee and get salted on a regular basis! Happy gardening!

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Laura Brown is an experienced ghostwriter and freelance writer. She also enjoys gardening and cooking. You can find some delicious recipes on her website, The Rancher's Daughter, along with a lot of useful and informative information on gardening, cooking, flowers, and living in the country. Learn more about Organic Fertilizer

9 comments:

  1. I had an organic garden for several years...I made "manure tea" (horse manure in a burlap bag soaked in a 5 gal pail of water)..I even planted catnip around the garden to keep the cat happy and the little furry things that snipped my pea plants. I don't have a garden any more..but use no poisons on the property.

    www.wildlifearoundus.blogspot.com

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  2. I sprayed my peppers last year with epsom salts. once the 1st of June and again the end of June. I've never seen so many peppers. The plants were HUGE and did not stop producing until December.

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  3. I like adding lots of compost to the soil before I even plant. It provides lots of nutrients. Plant and Garden Blog

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  4. I put epsom salt to my jasmine plant and now it is turning yellow and dying. Any suggestions?

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  5. Anonymous,
    How exactly did you administrate the application? Probably you over applied. Try some excessive watering . As a controlled test,you can apply a lesser amount to another jasmine plant and see what happens. Some plants are hyper sensitive for things like epsom and urea, but I really don't know if jasmine is one of them.

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  6. Thanx 4r visitng my blog...chk'd all your blogs...they are all too good...you are really a all rounder....will visitng for me.

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  7. I appreciate that this is a form of recycling!

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