Grow your own organic fertilizer

brandon.

Well-Known Member
Information borrowed from compost-info-guide.com

Grow Your Own Super-charged Organic Fertilizer

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Comfrey
If you have a spare garden bed, consider growing a patch of comfrey. Comfrey has deep roots that absorb nutrients from the subsoil, which are then stored in the leaves. Comfrey leaves have a high level of nitrogen making them a great activator for compost piles but their real value is in making comfrey fertilizer for your plants. When you compare the nutrient levels of compost with comfrey fertilizer at the end of this article you'll see why we use the term "super-charged."

Growing Comfrey
Comfrey is a hardy plant that will regrow from small pieces of root so it is important to choose the site with care. Comfrey rarely sets seeds so it won't infest your garden. The plants will do well in full sun to near full shade in an area that gets lots of moisture. Space the plants 2 to 3 feet apart and stand back and watch it grow. In the first year cut the flower stalks and add them to the compost heap. In the second year you should be able to get 3-4 cuts from a single comfrey patch. Just take a pair of shears and cut them back to about six inches from ground level. Wear gloves because the leaves can irritate skin.

Making Comfrey Fertilizer

  1. Fill a barrel or plastic garbage can 1/4 full with comfrey leaves
  2. Weigh the leaves down with a stone or a brick
  3. Fill the container with water
  4. Put a lid on the container
  5. Let stand for 4 to 6 weeks. The mixture is ready when the leaves have rotted and are no longer visible.
  6. Your liquid feed is ready to use in your garden!
  7. If your comfrey plants have grown enough you can start a new batch
  8. Another method is to use comfrey leaves as above but without the addition of water. The result is a thick, black concentrate. This should be diluted at 15:1 before use.
Comparative Nutritional Analysis of comfrey, compost and manure
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Source: "Comfrey, Past Present and Future", by L D Hills
 

KuLong

Well-Known Member
It is very useful.

My regular garden is a Permaculture garden and I have been studying ways to integrate our girls in it. I am currenty writing a post on it.

Here is a little copy and paste about Comfrey:

COMFREY: This is one amazing plant. Accumulates calcium, phosphorous and potassium. Likes wet spots to grow in. Comfrey is beneficial to avocado and most other fruit trees. Traditional medicinal plant. Good trap crop for slugs. Excellent compost activator, foliage spray, nutrient miner. Comfrey is truly essential to all gardens.
 

drolove

Well-Known Member
wanted to bump this cause its such an awesome idea. seems like its got a lot of potassium. is it possible to "OD" your plant with too much potassium?
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
wanted to bump this cause its such an awesome idea. seems like its got a lot of potassium. is it possible to "OD" your plant with too much potassium?
If the comfrey is composted a bit, the humus will bind it. Good to limit the fresh greens in top dressing. Instead, maybe consider making a botanical tea from it. Soak for 36 hours in water with a bubbler. Use the tea as soil drench or foliar. Then toss the leftover plant leaves in the worm bin or Bokashi pail. Just a thought.
 

hyroot

Well-Known Member
I've been looking for comfrey for a min. Plants, root, crown, or seeds. Nugbuckets made a video about it a while ago. I can't find it any where in socal.. Most nursery's have never even heard of it. I ordered comfrey online once from NC and got burned on that deal.
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
There are quality sources for Bocking 14 Comfrey. Root pieces are sold. Cann bought some recently.
 

Wetdog

Well-Known Member
I've been looking for comfrey for a min. Plants, root, crown, or seeds. Nugbuckets made a video about it a while ago. I can't find it any where in socal.. Most nursery's have never even heard of it. I ordered comfrey online once from NC and got burned on that deal.
Order from *Horizon Herbs*

www.horizonherbs.com

Cheap to begin with and sometimes they have a special like 12 roots for $10 or similar, maybe 6. I don't remember, I got mine 3 years ago and they are going like bandits.

This is the Bocking 14 cultivar. I have 8 or 9 plants, hard to tell they are so thick 6 is plenty, trust me. Not so much the first year, but after they over winter and come back the next spring, look out.

I just cut and feed to my worms, or did. I either need more worm bins or need to make the juice with them. But they do stink making tea/FPE.

Perfect noob plant, you simply cannot overwater these plants. If I could keep the roots anchored, a shallow creek would be perfect for them. LOL Did I mention they like water?

Wet
 

NickNasty

Well-Known Member
I plan on getting a Bocking 14 from horizon herbs it is also great for healing. I also plan on growing some stinging nettle. Now if I could only grow Kelp...

[video=youtube;yEHc_UzeT9w]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yEHc_UzeT9w[/video]
 
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