Free Award winning all natural soil in tacoma!

NoGutsGrower

Well-Known Member
That's right, I know I'm in Cali right now but Tacoma is my home! They might not have the best pot laws but they give you free all natural soil! Soil from a place that gets the Environmental Protection Agency’s first place award for the best biosolids program in the country.

DID YOU KNOW
TAGRO Mix is free if you shovel it yourself! (Bring a shovel and buckets, or a truck.)

http://www.cityoftacoma.org/Page.aspx?nid=306

How does your garden grow?
With TAGRO premium soil products, it will grow faster, greener, better.

The City of Tacoma’s TAGRO Mix and TAGRO Potting Soil can serve all of your gardening needs—indoors and outdoors.
Short for “Tacoma Grow,” our award-winning, environmentally friendly products will give you better results with your lawn and garden—even while you help to reuse community resources and protect our environment.

Proven safe and effective—and awarded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s highest rating for use in landscaping, vegetable gardens and indoor container gardens—all-natural TAGRO products are made from a blend of pasteurized wastewater byproducts called biosolids and other weed-free gardening components.

By the bucket or truckload, TAGRO customers say their gardens grow faster, lawns grow thicker and trees grow taller. Vegetables and flowers grown in TAGRO have earned more than 120 ribbons at the Puyallup Fair since 1992. And our biosolids program has received national awards, including the Environmental Protection Agency’s first place award for the best biosolids program in the country.

Consumers in Tacoma have been using TAGRO Mix in landscaping and vegetable gardens since 1991. A newer product, TAGRO Potting Soil (available in bulk and by the bag), makes it even easier for your garden to grow. And, because of improvements to the process that Tacoma uses to create its biosolids, the material that goes into TAGRO Potting Soil is virtually odor-free.
 

cannabitch81

Active Member
That's right, I know I'm in Cali right now but Tacoma is my home! They might not have the best pot laws but they give you free all natural soil! Soil from a place that gets the Environmental Protection Agency’s first place award for the best biosolids program in the country.

DID YOU KNOW
TAGRO Mix is free if you shovel it yourself! (Bring a shovel and buckets, or a truck.)

http://www.cityoftacoma.org/Page.aspx?nid=306

How does your garden grow?
With TAGRO premium soil products, it will grow faster, greener, better.

The City of Tacoma’s TAGRO Mix and TAGRO Potting Soil can serve all of your gardening needs—indoors and outdoors.
Short for “Tacoma Grow,” our award-winning, environmentally friendly products will give you better results with your lawn and garden—even while you help to reuse community resources and protect our environment.

Proven safe and effective—and awarded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s highest rating for use in landscaping, vegetable gardens and indoor container gardens—all-natural TAGRO products are made from a blend of pasteurized wastewater byproducts called biosolids and other weed-free gardening components.

By the bucket or truckload, TAGRO customers say their gardens grow faster, lawns grow thicker and trees grow taller. Vegetables and flowers grown in TAGRO have earned more than 120 ribbons at the Puyallup Fair since 1992. And our biosolids program has received national awards, including the Environmental Protection Agency’s first place award for the best biosolids program in the country.

Consumers in Tacoma have been using TAGRO Mix in landscaping and vegetable gardens since 1991. A newer product, TAGRO Potting Soil (available in bulk and by the bag), makes it even easier for your garden to grow. And, because of improvements to the process that Tacoma uses to create its biosolids, the material that goes into TAGRO Potting Soil is virtually odor-free.
LOL... Where does the soil come from? Tacoma is notorious for their contaminated soil (arsinec and lead)
http://www.tpchd.org/environment/healthy-environment/dirt-alert/
 

toughwork

Active Member
LOL... Where does the soil come from? Tacoma is notorious for their contaminated soil (arsinec and lead)
http://www.tpchd.org/environment/healthy-environment/dirt-alert/
dude, its not soil at all, its TAGRO. tagro is the remaining dewatered solid waste from the waste treatment facilities. ive never seen this used in indoor gardens, however, i use a thin layer of it over my front and back yard as fertilizer every year. the neighbors all know to close their windows too cuz this SHIT stinks. lmao
 

cannabitch81

Active Member
dude, its not soil at all, its TAGRO. tagro is the remaining dewatered solid waste from the waste treatment facilities. ive never seen this used in indoor gardens, however, i use a thin layer of it over my front and back yard as fertilizer every year. the neighbors all know to close their windows too cuz this SHIT stinks. lmao
Wow, must be really potent!!! Definitely not for indoor use. :)
 

The Latent Image

Well-Known Member
I went on vacation and stopped to stay with a friend in Tacoma. His garden veggies looked like they were on steriods.... How can I get some to try here in Hawaii?
 

tferro253

Member
has anyone thought of growing indoors with the tagro? either mix the tagro with other soil or use there potting mix? i have used it outdoors with great success but never with cannabis
 

seaabs

Member
Indoor and out works just fine, but you need to let it air out at least one day first. Also letting the rain rinse it keeps the 60 percent nitrogen mix (which is free) from burning your shit. They sale a slightly diluted version for five dollars a wheel barrel.
 

aptFarmer

Member
So its shit, or the shit?! haha. Very interesting, thanks for posting. I'm gonna try and get some this week, ill let you all know how it goes :). Maybe we can send some down to you in Hawaii!
 

scoobyru

Member
Coming up on a year old thread, but I'm near Tacoma, and found this in a search because I was thinking about using it. Does anyone know how this turned out?
 

jaydub13

Well-Known Member
This sounds like a bad idea... using human shit for fertilizer. I know the Chinese have been doing it for a long time, but I don't really care to ingest ANYTHING that was grown from sewage. I wouldnt want to take a chance in that with a compromised immune system. Just my $.02
 
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