Cheap quick calcium supplement

Cantero

Member
I'm sure most of you know the benefit of egg shells in soil, they give a nice boost of calcium to the plants, and also contain a few of trace minerals, they can also be used right away, without composting them...this is just a quick guide to making a nice cheap calcium supplement for your plants.

First, fry/scramble up some eggs and save the shells, after you are done eating, wash the shells thoroughly with some water, make sure none of the snot is left, you may notice a thin membrane on the inside of the shell, don't worry about that for now.

After you have them washed up, get a blender/coffee grinder and grind them up as fine as you can, I have found adding a bit of water helps them grind. Take the mixture and pour it into a clear glass, and fill the glass halfway with water, stir it up a bit. You should notice the small bits of egg shell sink to the bottom rather quickly, and the water becomes a milky white, the stuff that stays suspended in the water is the membrane, we don't want that, so pour off the milky water and repeat until you get relatively clear water after the shell bits settle.

Now, take a mortar and pestle, or if you don't have one of those get a shallow bowl and something with a nice round blunt end and grind it up and fine as you can get it, the finer the better. Once you are satisfied just toss it into the oven on about 200 to get rid of the excess moisture, you will be left with a fine powder of nearly pure calcium.

I usually just mix a few tablespoons of it into my soil and have never had a problem with calcium, you can also add it to water and water already potted plants with it, it will make its way down into the soil fairly quickly if you ground it fine enough.
 

Cantero

Member
Could just use a human calcium supplement, ground to a fine powder. Also helps in root growth.
That usually costs more than eggs though.

I also know quite a few people that do this and mix it in with their food for calcium, if it is fine enough you can't even tell it's there.
 

lince

Well-Known Member
nice info cantero, thanks for sharing and +rep for you, where did you get it from ?
 

Cantero

Member
nice info cantero, thanks for sharing and +rep for you, where did you get it from ?
Well I was looking up cheap ways to add a bit of calcium to my soil on google, and I came across some info that said finely ground egg shells can be used by plants fairly quickly (A week or two), versus having larger chunks take months to degrade enough to be usable, and this was just the process I used to make sure I got them ground up enough, and so it didn't have the membrane and stuff in it.

Since then it's just what I add to my soil mix, I usually mix my own soil with some coco, homemade compost, a bit of mulch, a ton of perlite and then some egg shell powder.

5 parts coco
2 parts compost
1 part mulch
2 metric fucktons of perlite
2 tablespoons eggshell powder

Of course if you do homemade compost you can always just compost the egg shells and not have to go through the grinding and stuff, but it works good for a quick calcium boost.
 

lince

Well-Known Member
It's good you can make your own compost. I was thinking about adding some calcium to a strawberry plant with what seems to be a calcium def. and I was told to use the egg shells but didn't know how to "prepare" so it was nice to find your thread :)
 

CFLNoob

Well-Known Member
Great post! I'm going to attempt to foliar feed the fine powder due to a ph problem and see how it goes.
 

LIBERTYCHICKEN

Well-Known Member
Instead of useing water you can use vinegar - You just leave the vinegar and eggshels long enouth for the bubbling to stop , Check PH to make sure it's not to low then water with the calcium rich liquid thats instantly avaible
 
Instead of useing water you can use vinegar - You just leave the vinegar and eggshels long enouth for the bubbling to stop , Check PH to make sure it's not to low then water with the calcium rich liquid thats instantly avaible
I 2nd this

The op is making a fine calcium carbonate powder. That would release slow.
Very good idea though, and cheap!

Using vinegar makes calcium acetate which is water soluble.
Filter the viengar afterwards and evaporate it off, after you'll be left with a crystalized form of it.
for easier storage.
 
I'm having a cal-mag problem with the nutes I have. This may save my plants. I know the mag is in Epsom but didn't know where to get the Cal. Thank you.
 
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