Don't just focus on the word organic, think about the meaning of the word and why people are doing it this way instead of just using synthetics. For example a company might sell you a bottle of liquid organic humic acid, but then they're putting it in a plastic bottle made from petro, using a machine that runs on coal energy, and shipping it from your store from the other side of the world using trucks and ships built in the late 80s.
Now compare that to creating a small compost bin, turning it daily for three to four weeks and taking the extra 'compost juice' and pouring it onto your garden.
Both ways give you humic acid, and both are technically organic, but only one way is following the true spirit of the word organic. And who's to say it's only humic acid your plants need. That compost juice, while high in humic acid, it's also high in all the other maco and micro nutrients. So even if we haven't figured out what exactly our plants needs, chances are mother nature knows and will provide.
This is why so many organic gardeners will tell you it's more important to feed the soil and not your plants. Good soil is that which is high in organic matter. The more organic matter you have, the less problems you'll run into regardless of what else is going on. Have really high ph? Add lots of organic matter. How really low ph? Add lots of organic matter. Does organic matter fix the ph? No. But it buffers and improves the water & nutrient holding abilities of the soil that ph never even affects the plant to begin with.
Here's another another of bad organics... the use of Guano. Sure it's organic, but harvesting it is very destructive, and it's never been proven to be better then anything else. So why use it? Most likely it's because it looks like the most organic thing in the hydro shop and lots of people like Subcool and all the tea brewers on this site and others add it to their teas. Oh and don't get me started with teas. So many people just grab everything on the shelf and call it a super tea and they don't even have a clue what their doing.
When you really sit down and think about it, one of the best organic products you can use is green manure. Think kelp, legumes, alfalfa meal. And the closer it is to it's natural shape and form the better. The exception being with kelp. Make sure to wash it first. You know, the whole salt kills plants thing and all.
Also I don't know if you pay'd attention during Earth Science in college, but one of the things I learned was about how plants are able to reestablish themselves after a major forest fire or volcano. First you have small grasses, but then they die and their leaves create a cushion for another plant species to come in. That plant in turn drops leaves and flowers, creating another layer. Every tree and flower that drops leaves is really creating a new layer of soil for itself. Again, it all comes back to organic matter. Add organic matter and avoid anything that's highly refined and processed. Mother nature will take care of the rest.
Here's a photo of my garden. The big bushy plant off to the left was fertilized three times this year at 1/4th the recommended strength and it's directly in the ground. I have to fertilize because of the low organic content in the soil. However the tall skinny Sativa way in the background. I planted her in a 3'x3' raised bed. Fill it with ready to use organic potting soil from Home Depot. Cost me $4 a bag. Placed her in the bed in mid March and were now in the middle of September. I've never had to fertilizer her!! Six inches of regular organic potting soil has been enough. Don't let the bushiness of the other plant full you. It's only bushy because it's near the end of flowering while the Sativa has just barely begun and isn't expected to finish until mid-to-late November.
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