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Soil Sample and Fertilizer


NickRB223

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Hey Everyone!

First post here. I live 30 min south of Columbia SC. All sandy soil, have planted sabal minor, needles, sabal palmetto, saw palmetto and Mediterranean fans.

Was looking to get some advice on whether or not to fertilize. If yes, recommend doing it in the fall?

 I attached a pic of our soil sample.

Appreciate any info/advice y'all could provide.

MVIMG_20180903_141333.jpg

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If your plants were recently put in the ground, then hold off until next year.  If they have been in the ground for a while, you can add fertilizer if you want. Most of your plants are natives, so they shouldn't have any nutrient deficiencies.  If you're going to do anything, do it relatively soon.  You don't want to have tender new growth coming out during the winter.

Welcome to the forum!

Lakeland, FL

USDA Zone 1990: 9a  2012: 9b  2023: 10a | Sunset Zone: 26 | Record Low: 20F/-6.67C (Jan. 1985, Dec.1962) | Record Low USDA Zone: 9a

30-Year Avg. Low: 30F | 30-year Min: 24F

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47 minutes ago, kinzyjr said:

If your plants were recently put in the ground, then hold off until next year.  If they have been in the ground for a while, you can add fertilizer if you want. Most of your plants are natives, so they shouldn't have any nutrient deficiencies.  If you're going to do anything, do it relatively soon.  You don't want to have tender new growth coming out during the winter.

Welcome to the forum!

Great! Appreciate your insight and thanks for the welcome! Could read these posts all day.

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The real concern is the ph of the soil. While it's not terribly low I'd work on that as well with some lime. Ease into fertilizers and try organics like sea kelp/weed or milorganite and definitely hold off til next year as last app should be mid month at latest to help them harden off for winter. Most stop in August I go out 1 month because I'm just a hair mad lol!

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LOWS 16/17 12F, 17/18 3F, 18/19 7F, 19/20 20F

Palms growing in my garden: Trachycarpus Fortunei, Chamaerops Humilis, Chamaerops Humilis var. Cerifera, Rhapidophyllum Hystrix, Sabal Palmetto 

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43 minutes ago, mdsonofthesouth said:

The real concern is the ph of the soil. While it's not terribly low I'd work on that as well with some lime. Ease into fertilizers and try organics like sea kelp/weed or milorganite and definitely hold off til next year as last app should be mid month at latest to help them harden off for winter. Most stop in August I go out 1 month because I'm just a hair mad lol!

Great! Thank you

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