All this started when I talked with @elfiii yesterday and he said YOU NEED LIME. I texted with him today and said we may be the only people to ever over lime a food plot. His reply was that will never happen. The man and I were spreading lime on food plots today preparing to plant clover. I...
Has anyone used the fertilizer spreader 3 point hitch to spread bulk lime. If so how did it work. Lime about 50 a ton verses the pellet at 6.99 a bag abouts for 40 lb.
Ag lime & bagged pulverized lime has more variability in the particle size. Bigger particles have to be broken down before they react with the soil. Pelletized lime also has binders to form the pellets that will constitute about 9-10% of its volume & mass, so you buy a little bit of inert stuff for the convenience of having pellets.
Pelletized lime is finely crushed (pulverized) lime, held together with a binder. Ag lime is just crushed up limestone (think crush and run in gravel) and can have more variation in what you get in terms of particle size. Some are very fine, some are bigger and take longer to dissolve. Pelletized lime is less dusty, easier to handle in terms of monitoring spread rate, and works faster because ...
I've mixed ag lime with fertilizer. Usually the fertilizer is damp enough to pick up the lime and make it flow. Usually about two bags of lime to a bag of fertilizer.
- The recommended rate of pelletized lime should be based on the neutralizing value of the lime and will probably be about 75 to 80% of that for average-quality bulk ag lime. 1560 lbs/ac of pelletized would be required to equal one ton of ag lime 2) Pelletized lime is an excellent source of high quality lime
I'll be the first to tell you I'm ignorant when it comes to fertilizer, lime, etc. My question is would chicken crap serve the same purpose as lime or fertilizer or both, as far as making my soil healthier? I'm guessing moreso the fertilizer with the nitrogen content?
Anyone have any experience they can share regarding Plotstart vs spreading bulk Ag lime? At $48/ 2.5 gallon jug, supposed to be equivalent of 1 ton of lime, the price point looks attractive, if it works. Have you used it on already growing perennial clover? Mine is looking really sparse and...