How to think about Fertilizer 2026

Discussion in 'Fruit and Veg Gardening' started by Dirtmechanic, Dec 23, 2025.

  1. Dirtmechanic

    Dirtmechanic Young Pine

    Joined:
    Feb 6, 2019
    Messages:
    1,961
    Likes Received:
    3,346
    Location:
    Birmingham, AL zone 8a
    Before adding any!

    I used an ai to format this up because typing!

    Most plant “nutrient problems” are not shortages.

    They’re access problems.

    Plants are built mostly from carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen (from air and water). Mineral nutrients matter, but they only work after the soil allows roots to breathe, drink, and function. Compaction, poor drainage, pH lockout, and nutrient antagonism will defeat any fertilizer plan—organic or synthetic—every time.

    Use the reference below to diagnose failure modes, not just deficiencies.

    Ask in this order:

    Can roots breathe? (structure, oxygen)

    Can roots drink evenly? (water flow, transpiration)

    Is pH allowing access? (not just presence)

    Are nutrients balanced, or blocking each other?

    Only then: is something actually missing?

    If your soil test says “adequate” but plants disagree, believe the plants.
    Presence ≠ availability.

    Rule of thumb:
    Plants don’t starve first — they suffocate, dehydrate, or get locked out.

    Winter is good for planning so summer doesn’t have to be chaotic.


    MAJOR NUTRIENTS (STRUCTURAL / NON-MINERAL)

    Carbon (C)
    • Soil reaction: Neutral
    • Common forms: CO₂ (air), organic matter, compost, biochar
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Low photosynthesis (shade, cold, imbalance)

    Hydrogen (H)
    • Soil reaction: Neutral
    • Common forms: Water (H₂O), soil moisture
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Drought stress, poor water retention

    Oxygen (O)
    • Soil reaction: Neutral
    • Common forms: Air in soil pores, aeration
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Compaction, waterlogging, root suffocation

    PRIMARY MACRONUTRIENTS (MINERAL)

    Nitrogen (N)
    • Soil reaction: Acidifying
    • Common forms: Urea, ammonium, nitrates, organic N
    • Primary control: Shared (microbes + plant)
    • Common failure mode: Leaching, volatilization, microbial tie-up

    Phosphorus (P)
    • Soil reaction: Slightly acidifying → neutral
    • Common forms: Bone meal, phosphates, rock phosphate
    • Primary control: Environment-leaning
    • Common failure mode: pH fixation (present but unavailable)

    Potassium (K)
    • Soil reaction: Neutral → slightly alkalizing
    • Common forms: Potash, potassium sulfate, kelp
    • Primary control: Plant-leaning
    • Common failure mode: Antagonism (excess Ca or Mg)

    SECONDARY MACRONUTRIENTS

    Calcium (Ca)
    • Soil reaction: Alkalizing
    • Common forms: Lime, gypsum, calcium nitrate
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Poor transpiration / uneven water flow

    Magnesium (Mg)
    • Soil reaction: Alkalizing
    • Common forms: Dolomitic lime, Epsom salt
    • Primary control: Shared
    • Common failure mode: Potassium antagonism, Ca imbalance

    Sulfur (S)
    • Soil reaction: Acidifying
    • Common forms: Elemental sulfur, sulfates
    • Primary control: Shared
    • Common failure mode: Slow microbial conversion, leaching

    MICRONUTRIENTS (TRACE)

    Boron (B)
    • Soil reaction: Slightly acidifying
    • Common forms: Borax, Solubor
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Over-application toxicity

    Chlorine (Cl)
    • Soil reaction: Neutral
    • Common forms: Irrigation water, KCl
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Salinity stress

    Copper (Cu)
    • Soil reaction: Slightly acidifying
    • Common forms: Copper sulfate, chelates
    • Primary control: Environment-leaning
    • Common failure mode: Accumulation, microbial suppression

    Iron (Fe)
    • Soil reaction: Acidifying
    • Common forms: Iron sulfate, chelates
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: High-pH lockout (chlorosis)

    Manganese (Mn)
    • Soil reaction: Acidifying
    • Common forms: Manganese sulfate
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: High pH, oxidized soils

    Molybdenum (Mo)
    • Soil reaction: Slightly alkalizing
    • Common forms: Molybdates
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Low-pH lockout (inverse of iron)

    Nickel (Ni)
    • Soil reaction: Neutral
    • Common forms: Trace presence
    • Primary control: Environment
    • Common failure mode: Rare toxicity

    Zinc (Zn)
    • Soil reaction: Slightly acidifying
    • Common forms: Zinc sulfate, chelates
    • Primary control: Environment-leaning
    • Common failure mode: High phosphorus antagonism


    I hope this helps someone this season!
     
    • Like Like x 2
    • Love Love x 1
    • Wow Wow x 1
    Last edited: Dec 23, 2025
  2. Loading...


  3. Dirtmechanic

    Dirtmechanic Young Pine

    Joined:
    Feb 6, 2019
    Messages:
    1,961
    Likes Received:
    3,346
    Location:
    Birmingham, AL zone 8a
    @Zigs its a brave new world.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    • Haha Haha x 1
  4. Zigs

    Zigs Young Pine

    Joined:
    Aug 30, 2021
    Messages:
    2,270
    Likes Received:
    6,358
    Location:
    Kent
    It is Mr Mechanic :D

    However, having established a hashtag for Captain Neem Oil earlier this year and then watching AI trying to quantify it, I wouldn't ever trust an answer from AI again. It came up with about 300 different ideas. Even when it got it almost right one day it changed it's mind the next day :rolleyes:

    One of the best so far is this one...

    Screenshot 2025-06-27 082148.png
     
    • Like Like x 1
    • Haha Haha x 1

Share This Page