Xtremehorticulture

Best Iron to Use is EDDHA Chelated Iron

Q.
I’m starting to think about the springtime approaching and the need for
fertilizing. Do you have an “iron Fertilizer” you recommend? We added the
compost you suggested but I want to make sure we are on top of the iron needs
of our plants.

Iron chelate fertilizer that works in all soils. Its a bit more expensive but it is a guarantee. The others will work most of the time.

A.
The iron chelate I like to use is a little bit more expensive. The reason I recommend
it is because of its stability in both highly alkaline and highly acidic soils.
It works regardless of the soil or its alkalinity (soil pH). I consider it cheap insurance.

Severe iron chlorosis on a peach seedling. Chlorosis is any yellowing leaving behind green veins. Iron chlorosis occurs all summer long but it is on new growth. Iron should be applied sometime in the early or mid spring, before April in our climate.

The chelate I like to use is EDDHA iron
chelate. It comes under several names but as long as the iron is bound to the
EDDHA chelate then it is what I recommend. Other types of chelates and iron
fertilizers stop working in highly alkaline soils.

This is another iron chelate fertilizer called EDTA. It works in most soils. It is the most common form of chelated iron fertilizers for plants because its more available and cheaper.

            If you are adding compost to compost
amended soil then any chelate or iron fertilizer will probably work whether it
is iron sulfate, brake filings, or iron chelates such as EDTA or DTPA This is
because soils that have compost added to them usually are not strongly
alkaline. The compost additions, along with water, usually lowers the
alkalinity of the soil.

The chelated iron I prefer, iron EDDHA, works over all of the different soil pH or alkalinity.


            Any iron fertilizer or chelate MUST
be applied and mixed with the soil in the early spring (sometime soon after
February 1 in our Las Vegas climate). Soil applications get less effective as
the growth begins stopping. By mid to late summer you must switch to iron
fertilizers applied as a liquid to the leaves for acceptable results. This usually requires several applications to shrub leaves. Iron
fertilizers applied wet to the leaves (foliar applications of iron) are not as
effective and may need to be applied to the leaves of trees and shrubs several
times to work.

3 thoughts on “Best Iron to Use is EDDHA Chelated Iron”

  1. Hello, really appreciate your expertise! I am in Phoenix and having difficulty finding a source for EDDHA chelated iron. Any recommendations?

  2. buy it from Grow Well online from Amazon. They reduced the price to about $15 for a one pound cannister. One pound is all you need for most landscapes. One ounce of this product with an early spring application once a year.

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