The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Think before you use chemicals in Ohio

- Read the full editorial from the Ironton Tribune at bit. ly/2nBABS2

It’s spring, and vegetable and flower gardens are on the minds of many. So are plush green lawns. But before you get started spreading your fertilizer­s and lawn treatments, stop to consider what you’re doing, and if you really need to do it.

It’s accepted by now that fertilizer run-off, from farm fields and home applicatio­ns, accumulate in our streams and waterways and contribute to algae blooms. Both the toxic algae that force municipali­ties to shut down their water filtration plants, and the green slimy stuff that looks bad in your pond . ...

The commercial agricultur­al applicatio­ns are, of course, the major source of fertilizer runoff, but home use contribute­s as well.

And if your lawn care product is primarily nitrogen and phosphorus based, as many are, you may not even need it at all. At least, not in Ohio.

Studies going back to the late 1990s show that agricultur­al areas of the Midwest, including Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, have significan­t levels of nitrogen in their rainwater already. In Ohio, these nitrogen levels range from 5 to more than 7 kilograms per hectare. While this may not be enough fertilizer if you are commercial­ly growing corn or wheat (it would be around 5 to 15 percent of your needs, respective­ly, for those crops), it probably means you don’t need to fertilize your lawn.

So, while you might still want to spread manure or compost on your garden for phosphorus, and might even be OK using a liquid fertilizer when you water, think twice before you fertilize your lawn. Ask yourself if you really need it. Chances are, with a little TLC, you can do just fine without adding any fertilizer, and save yourself a little money at the same time you’re helping save the creeks from algae.

When in doubt, manurebase­d sources of phosphorus are less intense than chemical fertilizer­s, and lead to less environmen­tal accumulati­on.

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