Fertilizer Boulder CO

If you are trying to grow a successful garden, you will need good fertilizer. The following article talks about some things to consider when buying fertilizer.

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Quality Cut Lawn Care
(806) 433-4602
2727 Folsom
Boulder, CO
Great Outdoors Maintenance, Inc.
303-449-5203
4519 N.26th St.
Boulder, CO
A Touch of Class Tree Service
303-274-8431
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Al BS Lawn & Tree Care
303-451-1479
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A & A Quality Fence Construction, CO
(303) 757-7053
4475 E. 128th Pl.
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Split Rail Fence Co.
(303) 828-1501
3330 E. I-25 Frontage Rd.
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Aquascapes of the Rockies
(720) 652-9727
5438 Bobcat Court
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VIEWPOINT LANDSCAPE & LAWN CARE LLC
(720) 335-8205
2241 E 160th AVE
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HG Landscape & Design Inc.
720-254-7367
7250 Gilpin Street
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Lee Hill Peat
(303) 443-8572
1441 Lee Hill Rd
Boulder, CO

Many people consider fertilizer tobe a vital factor in the equation to successful gardening. There's no doubt that applying fertilizer to your lawn, vegetable garden, houseplants or flowers has many benefits, but too much of a good thing can be worse than too little. You'll also need to know which kind to apply--there seem to be hundreds of different ones.

  1. How to read the bag. On each bag of fertilizer, there is a ratio, such as 10-5-10 or 29-6-4. These numbers tell you the ratio of nutrients in the fertilizer. The first number denotes the amount of nitrogen in the fertilizer. A ten-pound bag of 10-5-10 fertilizer would contain 10%, or one pound, of nitrogen. The second number is the phosphorus ratio. Thus, the ten-pound bag of 10-5-10 would contain 5%, or eight ounces, of phosphorus. The last number is the potassium ratio. The same bag of fertilizer would contain 10%, or one pound, of potassium. This number is also sometimes called the NPK number. The remainder of the material in the fertilizer is trace minerals and inert filler.

  2. What does nitrogen do? Nitrogen promotes the growth of foliage. A fertilizer with a higher ratio of nitrogen would be used when you want a lot of top-growth. This is the type of fertilizer you might apply to your lawn in spring. You wouldn't want to apply a high-nitrogen fertilizer in the fall, when the roots of your grass should be strong and deep in preparation for winter. Slow-release nitrogen is preferable to quick-release nitrogen for two reasons. The first reason is that there's less chance of burning your plants with slow-release nitrogen because the grains have been specially coated to break down slowly. The second reason isthat, since it breaks down slowly, itfeeds the soil, not the plants.

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Author: Tonya Sandersfeld

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Quality Cut Lawn Care

8064334602
2727 Folsom
Boulder, CO