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the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
|
From: <ju-bo at msn.com> on 2009.06.10 at 09:30:58(19413)
Dear Andras,
I am NOT an expert, but when I used to grow aquatic aroids, they used to suffer "leaf burn'', and I was told that the man-made granular AND some liquid fertilizers which contain ''salts'' were the main cause of this problem. I was given some liquid fertilizers with a low-salt content, and advised to use them in a weak mix more frequently, and to allow rain to 'flush'' the soil as often as possible, I also used OLD cow manure and WEAK mixes of fish emulsion fertilizer, this certainly improved the leaf burn situation. Perhaps you need to reduce the amount of fertilizer you use?
I hope that this may work for you.
Good Growing,
Julius
| HTML +More |
Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 13:30:42 +0200
From: asziranyi@gmail.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Is this the symptom of overwatered Amorphophallus?
Hi All,
Thanks you for the responses. Let's see the answers:
- Sun burning and "peeling" - what means a type of mechanical damage (As I am correct)
- Over fertilization.
Because all my plants are inside the flat and none of them are in front of the window, the sun burst isn't my problem. As I know there was no mechanical damage, too.
But I fertalized my plants a lot, so it seems to be the real problem.
Thank you again Agoston and Scott!
Bests,
Andras
On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 11:27 PM, Scott Hyndman <hyndman@aroid.org> wrote:
Hi Andras,
This necrosis and burning of the edges of the leaf tissue is
typically a symptom of over fertilization.
Regards, Scott
On May 29, 2009, at 5:44 AM, Andras Sziranyi wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> After few years of inactivity now I have more time to care for
> Amorphophalluses. I have only one specie (but one plant has
> different stub - we can discuss it later) the A. konjac. I hold
> them inside our flat because I don't have garden.
>
> Few days ago I've found that the leaves started to searing. Here is
> a picture about this:
>
> http://picasaweb.google.com/asziranyi/Amorphophallus?
> authkey=Gv1sRgCMDl9bvfjYbdrAE#5341174943982983570
> Could anybody know what wants the leaves tell me? :-)
>
> Thank you,
>
> Andras from Budapest, Hungary
>
> PS: Just imaging is here anybody from Hungary, too?
>
> _______________________________________________
> Aroid-L mailing list
> Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
> http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
--_035aa424-4f12-45f7-a775-daf84c5da815_----==============w45265881922972500= |
|
From: "Sherry Gates" <TheTropix at msn.com> on 2009.06.11 at 15:34:41(19417)
Hi Andras & everyone,
I have learned that rabbit poo is a great fertilizer that isn't considered 'hot' like most manure fertilizers/soil conditioners. I have a couple of rabbits and tried some 'fresh' rabbit poo on a few tomatoe plants. Some were already doing well and some were not. Now they're all doing great. I looked this up to send out to everyone who's interested in the organic fertilizer concept. The hay that falls under the cages (and when I change out the bedding) is great, too. Mulch and fertilizer all in one! I've since used it on everything from veggies to Philodendrons and so on. Hope this helps. Most manures MUST be comoposted well until very dry, but are still good.
Great growing to all,
Sherry
| HTML +More |
"Are rabbit pellets a good soil conditioner?
Answer:
Yes, rabbit manure is an excellent soil conditioner. Dr. George Dickerson, Extension Horticulture Specialist, states that rabbit manure is "high quality" soil conditioner. Since such manure is accumulated most often in the case of pet rabbits, there is very little likelihood of weed seeds in rabbit manure since the rabbits are often fed prepared rabbit food which does not contain viable weed seeds. He reminds us that there may be some weed seed in the rabbit bedding material, but that should not be a major concern.
Rabbit manure is also less likely to burn plants than some other manures, so it can be added directly to the garden. However, as with most manures, it can be composted with plant material waste before being added to the soil. Manure contains nitrogen which helps with the composting of plant wastes.
Dr. Dickerson also recommends starting a vermicompost under the rabbit cages. Get some "compost worms" often available at fish bait stores as "red wigglers" and release them into a pile or bin of bedding under the rabbit cage. Then you will have a source of good manure, worm castings, and a source of compost worms for other compost sites in your landscape. You can find more information on vermicomposting at the NMSU Cooperative Extension Service web site: "
www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/H-164.pdf.
----- Original Message -----
From: ju-bo@msn.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 4:30 AM
Subject: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
Dear Andras,
I am NOT an expert, but when I used to grow aquatic aroids, they used to suffer "leaf burn'', and I was told that the man-made granular AND some liquid fertilizers which contain ''salts'' were the main cause of this problem. I was given some liquid fertilizers with a low-salt content, and advised to use them in a weak mix more frequently, and to allow rain to 'flush'' the soil as often as possible, I also used OLD cow manure and WEAK mixes of fish emulsion fertilizer, this certainly improved the leaf burn situation. Perhaps you need to reduce the amount of fertilizer you use?
I hope that this may work for you.
Good Growing,
Julius
Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 13:30:42 +0200
From: asziranyi@gmail.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Is this the symptom of overwatered Amorphophallus?
Hi All,
Thanks you for the responses. Let's see the answers:
- Sun burning and "peeling" - what means a type of mechanical damage (As I am correct)
- Over fertilization.
Because all my plants are inside the flat and none of them are in front of the window, the sun burst isn't my problem. As I know there was no mechanical damage, too.
But I fertalized my plants a lot, so it seems to be the real problem.
Thank you again Agoston and Scott!
Bests,
Andras
On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 11:27 PM, Scott Hyndman wrote:
Hi Andras,
This necrosis and burning of the edges of the leaf tissue is
typically a symptom of over fertilization.
Regards, Scott
On May 29, 2009, at 5:44 AM, Andras Sziranyi wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> After few years of inactivity now I have more time to care for
> Amorphophalluses. I have only one specie (but one plant has
> different stub - we can discuss it later) the A. konjac. I hold
> them inside our flat because I don't have garden.
>
> Few days ago I've found that the leaves started to searing. Here is
> a picture about this:
>
> http://picasaweb.google.com/asziranyi/Amorphophallus?
> authkey=Gv1sRgCMDl9bvfjYbdrAE#5341174943982983570
> Could anybody know what wants the leaves tell me? :-)
>
> Thank you,
>
> Andras from Budapest, Hungary
>
> PS: Just imaging is here anybody from Hungary, too?
>
> _______________________________________________
> Aroid-L mailing list
> Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
> http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
------=_NextPart_000_00F7_01C9EA80.3B0A1600----==============F28398756582684947= |
|
From: "mossytrail" <mossytrail at hctc.com> on 2009.06.12 at 00:59:31(19419)
I don't suppose Dr. Dickerson has any info about rat manure?
I have two pet rats, and am experimenting with the best way
to extract their manure from their bedding.
Jason Hernandez
| +More |
Naturalist-at-Large
> Hi Andras & everyone,
> I have learned that rabbit poo is a great fertilizer
> that isn't considered 'hot' like most manure
> fertilizers/soil conditioners. I have a couple of rabbits
> and tried some 'fresh' rabbit poo on a few tomatoe plants.
> Some were already doing well and some were not. Now
> they're all doing great. I looked this up to send out to
> everyone who's interested in the organic fertilizer
> concept. The hay that falls under the cages (and when I
> change out the bedding) is great, too. Mulch and
> fertilizer all in one! I've since used it on everything
> from veggies to Philodendrons and so on. Hope this helps.
> Most manures MUST be comoposted well until very dry, but
> are still good.
> Great growing to
> all,
> Sherry
>
> "Are rabbit pellets a good soil conditioner?
>
> Answer:
> Yes, rabbit manure is an excellent soil conditioner. Dr.
> George Dickerson, Extension Horticulture Specialist,
> states that rabbit manure is "high quality" soil
> conditioner. Since such manure is accumulated most often
> in the case of pet rabbits, there is very little
> likelihood of weed seeds in rabbit manure since the
> rabbits are often fed prepared rabbit food which does not
> contain viable weed seeds. He reminds us that there may be
> some weed seed in the rabbit bedding material, but that
> should not be a major concern.
>
> Rabbit manure is also less likely to burn plants than some
> other manures, so it can be added directly to the garden.
> However, as with most manures, it can be composted with
> plant material waste before being added to the soil.
> Manure contains nitrogen which helps with the composting
> of plant wastes.
>
> Dr. Dickerson also recommends starting a vermicompost
> under the rabbit cages. Get some "compost worms" often
> available at fish bait stores as "red wigglers" and
> release them into a pile or bin of bedding under the
> rabbit cage. Then you will have a source of good manure,
> worm castings, and a source of compost worms for other
> compost sites in your landscape. You can find more
> information on vermicomposting at the NMSU Cooperative
> Extension Service web site: "
> www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/H-164.pdf
> du/pubs/_h/H-164.pdf>.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: ju-bo@msn.com
> To:
> aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
> Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 4:30 AM
> Subject: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized
> Amorphophallus?
>
>
> Dear Andras,
>
> I am NOT an expert, but when I used to grow aquatic
> aroids, they used to suffer "leaf burn'', and I was told
> that the man-made granular AND some liquid fertilizers
> which contain ''salts'' were the main cause of this
> problem. I was given some liquid fertilizers with a
> low-salt content, and advised to use them in a weak mix
> more frequently, and to allow rain to 'flush'' the soil as
> often as possible, I also used OLD cow manure and WEAK
> mixes of fish emulsion fertilizer, this certainly improved
> the leaf burn situation. Perhaps you need to reduce the
> amount of fertilizer you use?
> I hope that this may work for you.
>
> Good Growing,
>
> Julius
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> --------------------
> Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 13:30:42 +0200
> From: asziranyi@gmail.com
> To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
> Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Is this the symptom of
> overwatered Amorphophallus?
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
|
|
From: <ju-bo at msn.com> on 2009.06.12 at 10:22:38(19420)
Dear All,
Rabbit droppings sound good!
As a boy, my Dad and I would walk a large cow pasture and collect OLD cow-pies where we could see the grass growing up through the cake from below, or the seeds of Samman tree pods ("cow tamarinds") germinating in the pie, this meant that it was safe to crumble these older manure cakes around the roots of his prized Anthuriums.
I`m also interested in learning if fresh horse manure is also a ''safe'' or ''not hot'' fertilizer. Back in 1959 I recall seeing the old folks in the U.K. running out into horse parades passing by in the streets of large towns, their coal scuttles and broom in hand, to collect the just-fallen horse droppings to put fresh on their flowering shrubs. I was told that this was safe?
Julius
| HTML +More |
From: TheTropix@msn.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2009 10:34:41 -0500
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
Hi Andras & everyone,
I have learned that rabbit poo is a great fertilizer that isn't considered 'hot' like most manure fertilizers/soil conditioners. I have a couple of rabbits and tried some 'fresh' rabbit poo on a few tomatoe plants. Some were already doing well and some were not. Now they're all doing great. I looked this up to send out to everyone who's interested in the organic fertilizer concept. The hay that falls under the cages (and when I change out the bedding) is great, too. Mulch and fertilizer all in one! I've since used it on everything from veggies to Philodendrons and so on. Hope this helps. Most manures MUST be comoposted well until very dry, but are still good.
Great growing to all,
Sherry
"Are rabbit pellets a good soil conditioner?
Answer: Yes, rabbit manure is an excellent soil conditioner. Dr. George Dickerson, Extension Horticulture Specialist, states that rabbit manure is "high quality" soil conditioner. Since such manure is accumulated most often in the case of pet rabbits, there is very little likelihood of weed seeds in rabbit manure since the rabbits are often fed prepared rabbit food which does not contain viable weed seeds. He reminds us that there may be some weed seed in the rabbit bedding material, but that should not be a major concern.
Rabbit manure is also less likely to burn plants than some other manures, so it can be added directly to the garden. However, as with most manures, it can be composted with plant material waste before being added to the soil. Manure contains nitrogen which helps with the composting of plant wastes.
Dr. Dickerson also recommends starting a vermicompost under the rabbit cages. Get some "compost worms" often available at fish bait stores as "red wigglers" and release them into a pile or bin of bedding under the rabbit cage. Then you will have a source of good manure, worm castings, and a source of compost worms for other compost sites in your landscape. You can find more information on vermicomposting at the NMSU Cooperative Extension Service web site: "
www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/H-164.pdf.
----- Original Message -----
From: ju-bo@msn.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 4:30 AM
Subject: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
Dear Andras,
I am NOT an expert, but when I used to grow aquatic aroids, they used to suffer "leaf burn'', and I was told that the man-made granular AND some liquid fertilizers which contain ''salts'' were the main cause of this problem. I was given some liquid fertilizers with a low-salt content, and advised to use them in a weak mix more frequently, and to allow rain to 'flush'' the soil as often as possible, I also used OLD cow manure and WEAK mixes of fish emulsion fertilizer, this certainly improved the leaf burn situation. Perhaps you need to reduce the amount of fertilizer you use?
I hope that this may work for you.
Good Growing,
Julius
Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 13:30:42 +0200
From: asziranyi@gmail.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Is this the symptom of overwatered Amorphophallus?
Hi All,
Thanks you for the responses. Let's see the answers:
- Sun burning and "peeling" - what means a type of mechanical damage (As I am correct)
- Over fertilization.
Because all my plants are inside the flat and none of them are in front of the window, the sun burst isn't my problem. As I know there was no mechanical damage, too.
But I fertalized my plants a lot, so it seems to be the real problem.
Thank you again Agoston and Scott!
Bests,
Andras
On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 11:27 PM, Scott Hyndman <hyndman@aroid.org> wrote:
Hi Andras,
This necrosis and burning of the edges of the leaf tissue is
typically a symptom of over fertilization.
Regards, Scott
On May 29, 2009, at 5:44 AM, Andras Sziranyi wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> After few years of inactivity now I have more time to care for
> Amorphophalluses. I have only one specie (but one plant has
> different stub - we can discuss it later) the A. konjac. I hold
> them inside our flat because I don't have garden.
>
> Few days ago I've found that the leaves started to searing. Here is
> a picture about this:
>
> http://picasaweb.google.com/asziranyi/Amorphophallus?
> authkey=Gv1sRgCMDl9bvfjYbdrAE#5341174943982983570
> Could anybody know what wants the leaves tell me? :-)
>
> Thank you,
>
> Andras from Budapest, Hungary
>
> PS: Just imaging is here anybody from Hungary, too?
>
> _______________________________________________
> Aroid-L mailing list
> Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
> http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
--_a9d4e45f-098b-4a3c-a50c-a000696926e0_----==============ƒ33622715834871502= |
|
From: "Sherry Gates" <TheTropix at msn.com> on 2009.06.14 at 06:38:36(19421)
Hi Julius,
Do not use fresh horse manure. It needs to be dried, or it will burn. Most barnyard manures are hot if it's fresh. It's ok if it gets wet after it's 'cured', in fact it makes a great manure tea.
Take care,
Sherry
| HTML +More |
----- Original Message -----
From: ju-bo@msn.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Sent: Friday, June 12, 2009 5:22 AM
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
Dear All,
Rabbit droppings sound good!
As a boy, my Dad and I would walk a large cow pasture and collect OLD cow-pies where we could see the grass growing up through the cake from below, or the seeds of Samman tree pods ("cow tamarinds") germinating in the pie, this meant that it was safe to crumble these older manure cakes around the roots of his prized Anthuriums.
I`m also interested in learning if fresh horse manure is also a ''safe'' or ''not hot'' fertilizer. Back in 1959 I recall seeing the old folks in the U.K. running out into horse parades passing by in the streets of large towns, their coal scuttles and broom in hand, to collect the just-fallen horse droppings to put fresh on their flowering shrubs. I was told that this was safe?
Julius
From: TheTropix@msn.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2009 10:34:41 -0500
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
Hi Andras & everyone,
I have learned that rabbit poo is a great fertilizer that isn't considered 'hot' like most manure fertilizers/soil conditioners. I have a couple of rabbits and tried some 'fresh' rabbit poo on a few tomatoe plants. Some were already doing well and some were not. Now they're all doing great. I looked this up to send out to everyone who's interested in the organic fertilizer concept. The hay that falls under the cages (and when I change out the bedding) is great, too. Mulch and fertilizer all in one! I've since used it on everything from veggies to Philodendrons and so on. Hope this helps. Most manures MUST be comoposted well until very dry, but are still good.
Great growing to all,
Sherry
"Are rabbit pellets a good soil conditioner?
Answer: Yes, rabbit manure is an excellent soil conditioner. Dr. George Dickerson, Extension Horticulture Specialist, states that rabbit manure is "high quality" soil conditioner. Since such manure is accumulated most often in the case of pet rabbits, there is very little likelihood of weed seeds in rabbit manure since the rabbits are often fed prepared rabbit food which does not contain viable weed seeds. He reminds us that there may be some weed seed in the rabbit bedding material, but that should not be a major concern.
Rabbit manure is also less likely to burn plants than some other manures, so it can be added directly to the garden. However, as with most manures, it can be composted with plant material waste before being added to the soil. Manure contains nitrogen which helps with the composting of plant wastes.
Dr. Dickerson also recommends starting a vermicompost under the rabbit cages. Get some "compost worms" often available at fish bait stores as "red wigglers" and release them into a pile or bin of bedding under the rabbit cage. Then you will have a source of good manure, worm castings, and a source of compost worms for other compost sites in your landscape. You can find more information on vermicomposting at the NMSU Cooperative Extension Service web site: "
www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/H-164.pdf.
----- Original Message -----
From: ju-bo@msn.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 4:30 AM
Subject: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
Dear Andras,
I am NOT an expert, but when I used to grow aquatic aroids, they used to suffer "leaf burn'', and I was told that the man-made granular AND some liquid fertilizers which contain ''salts'' were the main cause of this problem. I was given some liquid fertilizers with a low-salt content, and advised to use them in a weak mix more frequently, and to allow rain to 'flush'' the soil as often as possible, I also used OLD cow manure and WEAK mixes of fish emulsion fertilizer, this certainly improved the leaf burn situation. Perhaps you need to reduce the amount of fertilizer you use?
I hope that this may work for you.
Good Growing,
Julius
Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 13:30:42 +0200
From: asziranyi@gmail.com
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Is this the symptom of overwatered Amorphophallus?
Hi All,
Thanks you for the responses. Let's see the answers:
- Sun burning and "peeling" - what means a type of mechanical damage (As I am correct)
- Over fertilization.
Because all my plants are inside the flat and none of them are in front of the window, the sun burst isn't my problem. As I know there was no mechanical damage, too.
But I fertalized my plants a lot, so it seems to be the real problem.
Thank you again Agoston and Scott!
Bests,
Andras
On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 11:27 PM, Scott Hyndman wrote:
Hi Andras,
This necrosis and burning of the edges of the leaf tissue is
typically a symptom of over fertilization.
Regards, Scott
On May 29, 2009, at 5:44 AM, Andras Sziranyi wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> After few years of inactivity now I have more time to care for
> Amorphophalluses. I have only one specie (but one plant has
> different stub - we can discuss it later) the A. konjac. I hold
> them inside our flat because I don't have garden.
>
> Few days ago I've found that the leaves started to searing. Here is
> a picture about this:
>
> http://picasaweb.google.com/asziranyi/Amorphophallus?
> authkey=Gv1sRgCMDl9bvfjYbdrAE#5341174943982983570
> Could anybody know what wants the leaves tell me? :-)
>
> Thank you,
>
> Andras from Budapest, Hungary
>
> PS: Just imaging is here anybody from Hungary, too?
>
> _______________________________________________
> Aroid-L mailing list
> Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
> http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
_______________________________________________
Aroid-L mailing list
Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
------=_NextPart_000_0024_01C9EC90.D6580BF0----==============V30142794532405878= |
|
From: Ken Mosher <ken at spatulacity.com> on 2009.06.15 at 05:18:09(19422)
Julius,
Horses don't digest their food as completely as cows. You may get a lot
of weeds from horse manure. The best has been composted and then taken
from the bottom of the pile where the weed seeds have been killed by the
heat.
| +More |
-Ken
ju-bo@msn.com wrote:
> Dear All,
>
> Rabbit droppings sound good!
> As a boy, my Dad and I would walk a large cow pasture and collect OLD
> cow-pies where we could see the grass growing up through the cake from
> below, or the seeds of Samman tree pods ("cow tamarinds") germinating
> in the pie, this meant that it was safe to crumble these older manure
> cakes around the roots of his prized Anthuriums.
> I`m also interested in learning if fresh horse manure is also a
> ''safe'' or ''not hot'' fertilizer. Back in 1959 I recall seeing the
> old folks in the U.K. running out into horse parades passing by in the
> streets of large towns, their coal scuttles and broom in hand, to
> collect the just-fallen horse droppings to put fresh on their
> flowering shrubs. I was told that this was safe?
>
> Julius
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: TheTropix@msn.com
> To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
> Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2009 10:34:41 -0500
> Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
>
> Hi Andras & everyone,
> I have learned that rabbit poo is a great fertilizer that isn't
> considered 'hot' like most manure fertilizers/soil conditioners. I
> have a couple of rabbits and tried some 'fresh' rabbit poo on a few
> tomatoe plants. Some were already doing well and some were not. Now
> they're all doing great. I looked this up to send out to everyone
> who's interested in the organic fertilizer concept. The hay that
> falls under the cages (and when I change out the bedding) is great,
> too. Mulch and fertilizer all in one! I've since used it on
> everything from veggies to Philodendrons and so on. Hope this helps.
> Most manures MUST be comoposted well until very dry, but are still good.
> Great growing to all,
> Sherry
>
> /"Are rabbit pellets a good soil conditioner? /
> /*Answer:* / /Yes, rabbit manure is an excellent soil conditioner. Dr.
> George Dickerson, Extension Horticulture Specialist, states that
> rabbit manure is "high quality" soil conditioner. Since such manure is
> accumulated most often in the case of pet rabbits, there is very
> little likelihood of weed seeds in rabbit manure since the rabbits are
> often fed prepared rabbit food which does not contain viable weed
> seeds. He reminds us that there may be some weed seed in the rabbit
> bedding material, but that should not be a major concern. /
> /Rabbit manure is also less likely to burn plants than some other
> manures, so it can be added directly to the garden. However, as with
> most manures, it can be composted with plant material waste before
> being added to the soil. Manure contains nitrogen which helps with the
> composting of plant wastes. /
> /Dr. Dickerson also recommends starting a vermicompost under the
> rabbit cages. Get some "compost worms" often available at fish bait
> stores as "red wigglers" and release them into a pile or bin of
> bedding under the rabbit cage. Then you will have a source of good
> manure, worm castings, and a source of compost worms for other compost
> sites in your landscape. You can find more information on
> vermicomposting at the NMSU Cooperative Extension Service web site: "
> //www.cahe.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h/H-164.pdf/
> /. /
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:* ju-bo@msn.com
> *To:* aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
> *Sent:* Wednesday, June 10, 2009 4:30 AM
> *Subject:* [Aroid-l] the symptom of overfertilized Amorphophallus?
>
> Dear Andras,
>
> I am NOT an expert, but when I used to grow aquatic aroids, they
> used to suffer "leaf burn'', and I was told that the man-made
> granular AND some liquid fertilizers which contain ''salts'' were
> the main cause of this problem. I was given some liquid
> fertilizers with a low-salt content, and advised to use them in a
> weak mix more frequently, and to allow rain to 'flush'' the soil
> as often as possible, I also used OLD cow manure and WEAK mixes of
> fish emulsion fertilizer, this certainly improved the leaf burn
> situation. Perhaps you need to reduce the amount of fertilizer
> you use?
> I hope that this may work for you.
>
> Good Growing,
>
> Julius
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 13:30:42 +0200
> From: asziranyi@gmail.com
> To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
> Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Is this the symptom of overwatered
> Amorphophallus?
>
> Hi All,
>
> Thanks you for the responses. Let's see the answers:
>
> - Sun burning and "peeling" - what means a type of mechanical
> damage (As I am correct)
> - Over fertilization.
>
> Because all my plants are inside the flat and none of them are in
> front of the window, the sun burst isn't my problem. As I know
> there was no mechanical damage, too.
> But I fertalized my plants a lot, so it seems to be the real problem.
>
> Thank you again Agoston and Scott!
>
> Bests,
>
> Andras
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 11:27 PM, Scott Hyndman
> > wrote:
>
> Hi Andras,
>
> This necrosis and burning of the edges of the leaf tissue is
> typically a symptom of over fertilization.
>
> Regards, Scott
>
> On May 29, 2009, at 5:44 AM, Andras Sziranyi wrote:
>
> > Hi All,
> >
> > After few years of inactivity now I have more time to care for
> > Amorphophalluses. I have only one specie (but one plant has
> > different stub - we can discuss it later) the A. konjac. I hold
> > them inside our flat because I don't have garden.
> >
> > Few days ago I've found that the leaves started to searing.
> Here is
> > a picture about this:
> >
> > http://picasaweb.google.com/asziranyi/Amorphophallus?
> > authkey=Gv1sRgCMDl9bvfjYbdrAE#5341174943982983570
> > Could anybody know what wants the leaves tell me? :-)
> >
> > Thank you,
> >
> > Andras from Budapest, Hungary
> >
> > PS: Just imaging is here anybody from Hungary, too?
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Aroid-L mailing list
> > Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com
> > http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
>
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>
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