Java Jolt Miami FL

While a cup of coffee can get you moving each morning, a java jolt is also a great pick-me-up for your organic garden. You can use coffee and tea byproducts as a slow-release fertilizer and key compost ingredient. Thinly dispersed coffee grounds serve as a soil amendment that puts nutrients back into the ground. This article provides you with some tips for getting "grounded".

Hicorp
(866) 430-4575
16341 Ravenwood Place
Hialeah, FL
VitaOrganix
(786) 845-8633
7921 NW 67th St
Doral, FL
Cruz Nursery Corp
305- 887-1588
274 E 9th St
Hialeah, FL
Lite Hauling
(305) 970-4153
5240 SW 112th Ave
Miami, FL
Botanica Olocun
305- 883-6085
1195 W 29th St
Hialeah, FL
Luke's Landscaping
(954) 551-4914
630 S Park Rd #313
Hollywood, FL
H & H Farms
305- 829-0222
18400 W Okeechobee Rd
Hialeah, FL
Cabo Landscaping
305- 863-7412
317 Palm Ave
Hialeah, FL
A 1 Lawn Mower & Garden Supply Inc
305- 863-2100
375 E 32nd St
Hialeah, FL
Pond Doctors
305-251-7663
Palmetto Ct
Miami, FL
Data Provided by:
  
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Give Your Garden a Coffee Break

While a cup of coffee can get you moving each morning, a java jolt is also a great pick-me-up for your organic garden. 

You can use coffee and tea byproducts as a slow-release fertilizer and key compost ingredient. Thinly dispersed coffee grounds serve as a soil amendment that puts nutrients back into the ground. 

Here are some tips for getting “grounded”: 

  1. Add coffee grounds (including filters) and tea bags to compost piles to create a rich, all-natural source of energy for plants.
  2. Dilute with water to make a fast-acting fertilizer.
  3. Use in soil for houseplants or in vegetable beds.
  4. Some gardeners believe coffee grounds can help repel pests, such as snails and slugs.
  5. If your garden needs more nitrogen, turn to coffee. Nitrogen is essential for leaf development.
  6. Plants that thrive in acidic soil—think pines, evergreens, blueberries, raspberries, roses, azaleas, gardenias, ferns, rhododendrons, lily-of-the-valley and marigolds—can benefit from coffee grounds, which slightly lower soil pH.
  7. Feed coffee grounds to garden worms. Worm excrement and the aeration provided by tunneling worms work wonders in the garden.
  8. ...

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