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Our knowledgeable staff here at Garden-Ville are available to answer many of the questions you might have about gardens, landscaping, and trees. Many problems with plants, however, cannot be responsibly diagnosed other than in person. We're located in central Texas and may not be familiar with the details of gardening in very different climate or soil zones. One of the guiding principles of organic growing is adapting methods to the particularites of local soil and climate. With that in mind we'll do our best to answer your question, but if we can't we'll be happy to help you find the appropriate resources or professionals in your area.

Feel free to browse the topics below to see if we've already answered a question similar to yours. If you can't find the information you need, the question submission form is located at the bottom of the page.

  • I need a recipe for making natural Mircale GRow- 15/30/15- Something I can add to water for my transplanted tomato and other veg. plant. I grow about 1,000 plants to sell at our farmers market and don't want to keep using mircale grow even thru it works Great! Can you help? Thanks, Wendell

    5/12/200812:32:06 PM Link 0 comments | Add comment

    Sea Tea

    Wendell,

    With organics you are not going to get that high of a NPK analysis. There is a product called Sea Tea that is great for growing tomatoes, it has an analysis of 2-3-2 and is made from sea weed extract, fish emulsion, molasses, and compost tea. It is an organic slow release liquid fertilizer that will help the roots and production and will not burn the plant. The suggested application rate is 2-4 ounce per gallon of water as a foliar feed or a soil drench.

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