All gardens need Potassium, or another name for it is "potash", helps vegetable crops stay healthy and fight off diseases also yield tasty produce. All gardens need potassium that is for sure. When your soil test shows a lack of potassium, spring is a good time to mix it in the soil. Wood ashes are a good source of potassium, even if you have a pile of ashes, go easy because wood ashes raise the soil pH. The best way is to mix one or two 10-quart pails for each 1,000 square feet of garden.
Potassium is also available in a natural product called "greensand," which you can find in some garden centers, it is rather pricey. Greensand comes from the ocean floor and has small quantities of many nutrients in addition to potassium. It is best if you add 5-6 pounds for every 100 square feet a week or so before planting.
In some stores you might find a bag of fertilizer labeled "muriate of potash", this will also work well for adding potassium to your soil.
A small potassium deficiency is often times hard to detect because it shows up as a general reduction in growth. A more serious deficiency is indicated when the leaves turn yellow on the tips and along the edges. In corn, the tips of the yellow area get broader and the leaf edges turn brown. The stalks will be weak and short and poorly filled ears. Tomatoes will not produce fruit, beets will grow in the shape of a carrot rather than the round plump bulbs they are suppose to be.
For making your garden more attractive go to our web site at www.limberlostgardencenter.com.