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- Organic
or Chemical Feeding of Plants
- BY JIM KENNARD
-
- A fundamental
question in vegetable gardening is - what is the proper use of
organic and/or chemical materials? Lets determine the truth
of the matter, with four basic principles and a few brief examples
from Dr. Jacob R. Mittleiders worldwide experience.
-
- I. First, let's consider
what plants need, and where and how they get it. Plants require
16 elements for healthy growth, and 95% of the plant is the result
of photosynthesis using just 3 elements - carbon, oxygen, and
hydrogen - all of which it gets from the air without mans
intervention. The other 13 elements come from the soil and make
up only 5% of the plant, but are nonetheless very important,
for without them the plant will fail. Most importantly, the plant
can only access these 13 nutrients as water-soluble minerals
through its root system.
-
- II. The next important
principle to understand is that everything in this world is a
chemical. Every element that makes up a plant, as well as everything
in our bodies, and everything in the soil in which we grow is
chemical. Therefore, we must not get carried away in refusing
to use chemicals in the garden in favor of something else, because
there is no something else!
-
- III. Most soils contain
all 13 nutrients, but due to thousands of years of leaching and
crop removal, the water-soluble compounds are mostly gone, and
what is left in the soil is not readily available.
-
- This is not
a big problem for trees and shrubs - they grow slowly enough
that they can wait for the natural chemical processes constantly
going on in the soil to make small amounts of nutrients water
soluble. However, this is not the case with vegetables. They
grow very quickly, multiplying their size many times in a few
weeks, and many complete their life cycle, including flowers,
fruit, and seeds, in only 60-90 days! This is why they often
need assistance.
-
- IV. Organic materials
can improve soil structure, provide food for beneficial soil
bacteria, and add mineral nutrients. Before using them, however,
they should be clean - weed, insect and disease-free. And beyond
that, there are still three problems with depending exclusively
on organic materials.
- 1. You never know which
nutrients and what amounts were in the previous plant.
- 2. Much of the plant
was eaten and became part of the man or animal.
- 3. The nutrients are not
usable until the old plant has decomposed and they have reverted
once again to water-soluble minerals. This takes time and fast-growing
vegetable plants cant wait. Plus, even more nutrients are
lost or become unavailable in the decomposition process.
-
- Dr. Jacob R. Mittleider has worked and taught
in many countries for 39 years, and he always found the people
were growing organically - doing their best with compost and
manure - as they have been doing for thousands of years, and
yet they were starving! So, with his 20 years of background in
the Nursery/Bedding Plant business, he experimented with small
amounts of natural mineral nutrients to supplement the organic
materials being used - always using the best amounts and ratios
he knew. By doing this he increased peoples yields of healthy
vegetables everywhere he went by as much as 10 to 1. And over
time, he improved his nutrient mix to the point that today, using
the Mittleider Pre-Plant and Weekly Feed mixes properly, anyone
can grow healthy trees, shrubs, and virtually any variety of
plants successfully in almost any soil or climate. Thats
why they are sometimes called The poor mans hydroponic
mix, but we recommend growing in the soil so the plants
can get the best possible natural nutrition.
-
- We apply less
than ½ pound of a balanced mix of the 13 mineral elements
to the 3500 pounds of minerals already in a 30 Soil-Bed
- and do this only 4 or 5 times for most vegetables. This does
not injure the plants or cause a toxic buildup in the soil. In
fact, extensive tests by both the Brigham Young University and
Stukenholtz Soil Labs found no toxicity in any Mittleider gardens,
including his personal garden that was in use for over 20 years.
-
- On the other
hand, misuse and over-application of mineral salts can cause
problems. This has been the case in Russia for many years. When
Dr. Mittleider began teaching and growing there in 1989, the
USSRs Agriculture Agents actually stole plants from his
garden, looking for nitrate toxicity in those dark green,
beautiful plants, hoping to expose him and force him to
leave the country. But there was no toxicity! And before long
the Agriculture Minister went on their National TV to proclaim
The only food grown in Russia thats fit to eat is
grown in a Mittleider Garden. They went on to make him
the featured speaker at the Yalta Conference of Agriculture Ministers,
and they gave him an honorary Ph.D. from Timirjazjiv Academy,
the most prestigious Agriculture school in the Country. For several
years they even gave Timirjazjiv Certificates to graduates of
Mittleiders three-month Agriculture School at Zaokski!
-
- Therefore,
in using mineral nutrients, always consider the content, purpose,
and amount carefully before applying them to your soil. They
are salts, and even table salt, while good for us in small amounts,
can cause health problems if over-used - and large amounts are
toxic and can even kill us. Its the same with all of these
materials - whether they are good or bad depends on the amounts
and how they are used.
-
- In summary,
Dr. Mittleider puts all available clean, healthy organic residues
into the ground immediately, for the maximum benefit to soil
and plants, and then uses small amounts of God-given natural
mineral nutrients to assure that his plants have complete and
balanced nutrition. I recommend you use the knowledge Dr. Jacob
R Mittleider has gained from his extensive education, training,
and practical experience to assure the greatest success in your
vegetable garden.
-
- Jim Kennard,
President
Food For Everyone Foundation
www.foodforeveryone.org
-
- Copyright
Jim Kennard. All Rights Reserved.
- _______________________________________
-
- Food for Everyone
A Charitable Foundation dedicated to helping people throughout
the world achieve individual and family self-sufficiency by using
the best possible vegetable gardening methods and materials,
consistent with a healthy ecology and environment. For more information,
please visit their website at www.foodforeveryone.org
-
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Recommended Book:
The
Mittleider Gardening Course
Book Description: Provides
comprehensive instruction on the Mittleider Method. Covers basic
and advanced topics such as cold-weather gardening, pruning for
maximum yields, growing plants vertically, solutions to common
gardening problems, understanding fertilizers, home seedling
production, building an inexpensive greenhouse and more.
>> For more
related books click here |
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- _______________________________________
ARTICLE POSTED
JUNE 01, 2003
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