Times Colonist

Last call for fertilizer — don’t apply it too late in season

- LEE REICH

Soon after midsummer, the growth of perennial plants starts winding down. They begin to squirrel away food energy in stems and roots, and stems start to toughen up in preparatio­n for the colder months ahead.

Fertilizin­g late in the season keeps plants youthfully exuberant, but they’ll pay for those excesses with cold damage once the weather turns chilly.

Fertilizer might not be needed at all in summer, but if it is, know what and how much you’re feeding, and do it now.

Major plant foods

The “big three” foods that plants get from the soil are nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. These nutrients are represente­d by the three numbers you see most prominentl­y displayed on fertilizer bags: 10-10-10, 5-10-5 and the like. The numbers represent nutrient concentrat­ions of, respective­ly, nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, more generally known as N, P and K. (Kalium is Latin for potassium.)

The applicatio­n rate for any fertilizer must be adjusted according to how concentrat­ed it is. Filling your salad bowl with chocolate bars instead of salad would be as foolish for you as spreading a concentrat­ed fertilizer like ammonium nitrate (34 per cent nitrogen) at the same rate as a less-concentrat­ed one such as cottonseed meal (seven per cent nitrogen) would be for your garden.

One way to know how much of a particular fertilizer to use is by just reading the label. A general recommenda­tion is usually offered.

Fertilizer math

Sometimes, though, you know how much food your plants need, so you must tailor your applicatio­n rate according to what fertilizer you have on hand. You could use any fertilizer that supplies the particular nutrient for which your plant hungers.

For instance, suppose a soil test indicates that your rose garden needs two-tenths of a pound of nitrogen per hundred square feet.

This recommenda­tion is in terms of nitrogen itself — socalled elemental nitrogen — rather than for any particular nitrogen fertilizer.

Dividing the fertilizer’s concentrat­ion of a particular nutrient by the needed amount of the elemental nutrient gives the amount of actual fertilizer to apply.

So, a 10 per cent nitrogen fertilizer divided by two-tenths of a pound of elemental nitrogen per hundred square feet gives an applicatio­n rate of two pounds of this fertilizer per hundred square feet.

A bag of 5-10-10 would call for twice this amount, or four pounds per hundred square feet.

That 10-10-10 fertilizer and 5-10-10 fertilizer both contain 10 per cent each of phosphorus and potassium.

If these other nutrients aren’t needed, get a fertilizer that is all or just about all nitrogen, such as cottonseed meal or ammonium nitrate.

Or go ahead and use the 10-1010 or other mixed fertilizer this time if you already have it, but beware of too frequently applying a food that isn’t needed, or you’ll be filling your plants’ salad bowl with chocolate bars.

Organic is easy

Cautions against fertilizin­g too late in the growing season don’t apply to fertilizin­g with compost. Compost oozes its goodness into the soil slowly and in sync with the weather and plant growth, so use it wherever and whenever it is available.

It’s relatively low in nutrients (yet rich in a lot of other good stuff), but a 2.5-centimetre depth spread over the ground provides all the nutrients that any plant would need for a whole year.

 ??  ?? Fertilizer, if needed, can be applied in summer, but not too late, or plants might not harden off sufficient­ly for winter cold.
Fertilizer, if needed, can be applied in summer, but not too late, or plants might not harden off sufficient­ly for winter cold.

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