Q. Being I have several neglected outside plants that
need attention, I cleaned their dead growth and replaced any soil missing with
new potting soil. Is it safe to
fertilize and water this time of the year using Miracle Gro and tonic?
Miracle Gro was purchased by Scotts and some in sales say the quality has gone down among chemical fertilizers. As far as I am concerned, it is water soluble and carries the right combination of nutrients and low in toxic elements, who cares?
A. You didn’t tell me which plants you have, I don’t know
which Miracle Gro fertilizer you want to apply, and I don’t know what the
“tonic” means. To be on the safe side don’t apply anything to the soil or to
the plants until winter temperatures warm up sometime in February or early March.
To be more specific, if the
plants are winter tender (freeze above 25F in our climate) then don’t stimulate any new growth
with any nitrogen fertilizer. Wait it out until spring. Don’t apply any high nitrogen
fertilizers (fertilizers with the first number on the bag highest) until late
February or early March. The later you delay applying fertilizers during the
winter the better. The same holds true of the “tonic” that you mentioned.
Super thrive falls in the category of a “plant tonic” in my opinion. It is not a fertilizer or it could fall under the states fertilizer laws and be regulated. Some “plant tonics” people swear by and some people swear at. If it contains nitrogen in the ingredients, be careful of stimulating late season growth if the plant gets an excess.
In the future don’t use “potting
soil” to fill holes or empty spaces in the soil. Try to match well the soil you are applying closer to the type of soil surrounding the plant roots. Potting
soil is usually too “fluffy”. If you already have this potting soil or can’t do
this for some reason, then make sure potting soil is mixed well with the
surrounding soil and then water thoroughly.