The Growing Importance of Creating Your Own Fertilizer
We’ve all been watching prices climb at the grocery stores, and it’s only getting worse. There are issues at every level of food production and distribution. Certain kinds of mandates have made it more difficult for truckers to do their job. Meat processors had to add a variety of safety protocols and new jobs, such as “social distance monitors,” in their processing plants to slow down Covid outbreaks. The more overhead expenses the processors have, the more the costs of the actual product increase. And in between the megadrought and skyrocketing fertilizer prices, food is simply getting harder to produce. The ongoing fire at the fertilizer plant in North Carolina will not help.
The Organic Prepper has long encouraged readers to learn as much as they can about producing food. Even apartment dwellers can usually produce something. If you are blessed with a yard, you can probably produce some of your own fertilizer, too, in the form of compost.
Fertilizer is a gift
When I lived along the Gulf Coast, all I had to do to get high-quality compost was dump lawn and food scraps in a pile. I’d spray the pile with a hose several times a week if the weather was dry. A few times a year, I’d dig into the bottom of the pile and pull out beautiful black, crumbly compost for my garden.
I can’t do that these days. I live on the High Plains. It’s really dry. We get snow in the springtime, and that’s about it. Fifty years ago, my area would have snow on the ground for much of the winter, but that doesn’t happen anymore. Here, to get compost, you need to water and turn religiously during the summer months. But we don’t have water during the summer months. Between the drought and the increased development in my area draining the reservoirs, my well is in a pretty sorry state by August and September. So far, I’ve had enough for my animals, garden, and household needs, but we really don’t have much extra.
Water is vital to producing your own fertilizer
For the past couple of years, I have been trying to capture as much water as I can. Having more than one 55-gallon rain barrel is illegal in my area. So I’ll admit I have one 55-gallon rain barrel. Since it’s so dry here, even when it snows, it will often begin to melt the next day. For example, we might have two days of snow and then a week of 50/20 highs and lows. So we have freeze/thaw cycles every single day.
Because I have things to do besides haul water, I hooked up a hose to the base of my rain barrel and ran it from the barrel to my garden. I mulch my garden heavily in the fall. When the ice in the barrel melts, it runs into my garden, soaking into the soiled wood chips, straw, leaves, kitchen scraps, etc. The mulch captures the water, and the water breaks the mulch down into organic soil particles faster than it would break down on its own.
Compost protects your land
An additional benefit of keeping my garden soil as wet as possible is that it is less likely to blow away. My area is so windy; oftentimes, during extended dry periods, you can see the wind ripping away exposed soil. I want to prevent as much of that as possible.
E-Course: Bio-Intensive Gardening
I also have a large compost pile, where I let my hot (nitrogen-rich) manure and soiled animal bedding break down before adding to my garden. I can’t water this enough to make it active during the summer. It just dries out; I dug into it this fall to see what had decomposed. The part closer to the top, which had had snowfall on it during the winter, had broken down into nice black garden-ready compost. But I had not reached down far enough when I had turned it the past few years and found dried out chunks of moldy hay that I’d put in three or four years ago.
Snow can help you produce your own fertilizer too!
So, this year, I made the composting area wider. It captures more snow now. I’ve also been better about mixing the snow into the compost periodically. Like in my garden, the soiled bedding captures more of the moisture. Very little moisture runs off; it stays in the compost area, and when it warms up, it will decompose more quickly. My goal has been to capture as much moisture as possible on my property by directing it into areas that will soak it up.
Snow has additional benefits for your garden and compost heap. It actually contains nitrogen, along with other elements. The old wives’ tale about snow being “poor man’s fertilizer” has been proven correct. Snow also contains a smaller amount of deuterium oxide, also known as heavy water. Heavy water slows down some of the chemical processes in plants; conversely, plants watered with melted snow have grown faster in trials. Capturing as much snow as you can will not only save money on water, it will also help fertilize.
(Make sure you check out our free QUICKSTART Guide on canning what you harvest from your garden as well. Waste not, want not!)
Tips on “growing” your own compost/fertilizer
If you live in an arid environment but want to garden and are looking for inspiration, I can’t recommend Gary Paul Nabhan’s books strongly enough. I read Growing Food in a Hotter, Drier Land a few years ago, and it gave me a lot of ideas in terms of siting gardens and directing runoff. Mr. Nabhan gives many examples of cultures that have survived and thrived in desert environments, often using extremely low-tech methods of raising food. Raising food with limited water is not impossible, but it does require some planning.
I have been describing big projects, but there’s no reason people with suburban lots can’t do something similar on a smaller scale. I had a nice yard when we lived in Houston, but it wasn’t particularly huge. We were still able to compost. Rain barrels can be expensive. I got mine from a friend who was moving to Florida. If you can’t afford a rain barrel, you might be able to afford gutter extenders, which are available at most hardware stores. You could use those to direct runoff from your roof into a compost heap.
And what goes into your compost heap if you don’t have livestock? Yard and kitchen waste. Think before you bag: is it compostable?
A note about kitchen waste: Don’t put meat/dairy scraps in a pile in your yard. You will attract all sorts of unwanted visitors. When we lived in Texas, if I had a large number of shrimp shells that I didn’t want to toss in a landfill, I would bury them a few feet deep in my garden bed. Meat/dairy products can benefit your soil, but if you don’t manage them properly, your stray animal problem will make it not worthwhile. We buried them deep enough that rodents and cats couldn’t get them; we had a solid privacy fence that kept out stray dogs. We were able to make it work. You may or may not be in that situation, but it’s something to think about.
Things have changed
Many (not all) Americans have gotten used to life’s necessities being cheap and readily available. Many people have not had to think about where their food came from, where their garbage went, why everything worked when you flipped a switch or turned a faucet. That’s changing.
In a way, those of us that have fallen on hard times before are fortunate. Some of us have already spent a fair amount of time thinking, “How do I pay for this? Is there a way to make this cheaper?” A lot more people are heading into that territory.
Many people turned to gardening for a variety of reasons in 2020. If you are still fairly new to gardening, but have gotten discouraged, at water rates and fertilizer costs, don’t despair. Start looking around you. A truly shocking 30-40% of food in the United States is tossed into the trash. There are myriad reasons for this; look at your own food habits and ask where you are, relative to the average. I would never tell anyone to eat rotten food. But it doesn’t need to go into a landfill, either.
The same goes for yard waste. Most of it doesn’t need to go into a landfill. Yes, downed tree limbs are hard to deal with. However, you have options. For example, in my neighborhood, if a major storm knocks out a lot of trees, several neighbors will get together to rent a wood chipper. The $300/day price tag is a lot if you’re going it alone, but you have multiple friends that get together to rent it, it becomes a lot more affordable. Many of us use wood shavings for animal bedding, but it can also just be another good addition to the compost pile.
If you are able to start a compost heap, you might be able to get friends to pitch in. My friends and neighbors know that I keep pigs, and my pigs love scraps. My friends and neighbors love bacon. It’s a win-win. We’ve also talked a lot on the Organic Prepper about circles of friends and building community. If you have a couple of like-minded friends, a community compost/garden exchange may be a good project.
This is doable
The key to not only surviving but thriving is going to be avoiding waste. Look at everything as a potential resource. Yes, prices are going up, and yes, times may be getting hard. But people in the U.S. have gone through hard times before. If those of us who are honest and work with goodwill share ideas and communicate, we will get through it.
Source: The Organic Prepper
Joanna has been homeschooling three children since 2012. In 2014, she moved to the High Plains of Colorado. She and her children began a little homestead, gardening and raising chickens for eggs and meat. One animal led to another, and these days they have livestock guardian dogs, chickens, geese, ducks, alpacas, goats, pigs, and one very spoiled cat.