Tea Leaves as Fertilizer, etc.
- Ivan Mann
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I generate more tea leaves than coffee grinds, so I googled tea leaves as fertilizer. Two websites claim that tea leaves are the best thing since sliced bread (to use a US metaphor), and that they kill fungi, kill weeds, improve water retention, etc.
I find it hard to believe that tea leaves will attack weeds but not attack the trees.
Any experience with tea leaves?
I find it hard to believe that tea leaves will attack weeds but not attack the trees.
Any experience with tea leaves?
by Ivan Mann
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- FrankC
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Yes you can use it as fertilizer, as a part of your regular scheme like coffee grind will do. It can not replace your regular fertilizer.
You can use it liquid or chopped and will kind of have a disinfectant effect due to "tein" , the working ingredient.
You can use it liquid or chopped and will kind of have a disinfectant effect due to "tein" , the working ingredient.
Last Edit:2 years 1 day ago
by FrankC
Last edit: 2 years 1 day ago by FrankC.
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- FrankC
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just found this on a website;
According to a study by the University of Florida, tea waste contains 4.15% nitrogen. That's about twice as much nitrogen as in coffee grounds. Tea leaves also contain almost twice as much phosphorus and potassium. The study found that tea leaves have an NPK of 4.15/0.62/0.4, while coffee grounds have an NPK of 2.08/0.32/0.28.
According to a study by the University of Florida, tea waste contains 4.15% nitrogen. That's about twice as much nitrogen as in coffee grounds. Tea leaves also contain almost twice as much phosphorus and potassium. The study found that tea leaves have an NPK of 4.15/0.62/0.4, while coffee grounds have an NPK of 2.08/0.32/0.28.
by FrankC
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- Tropfrog
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Weather or not fertilizer in tea leafs are awailable to your tree or not is depending on your soils ability to break down, mineralize and contain them. Most bonsai mixes containes a high percentage of dead nonorganic materials that do not have this ability.
by Tropfrog
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- Dave L
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"they kill fungi"
If this is true, it is not a good thing. Some potted trees benefit from symbiotic soil fungi which should be preserved.
If this is true, it is not a good thing. Some potted trees benefit from symbiotic soil fungi which should be preserved.
by Dave L
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- leatherback
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I knew about coffee grinds. Did not know about tea leaves. It is not my thing. There is so much good fertilizer out there that I just toss my green scaps on the compost, and put it well-compsted, in the soil of my garden
by leatherback
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- Ivan Mann
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I have repotted everything but azaleas now, and I have collected some tea leaves and ground them up. When I do the azaleas I will mix the tea leaves in and see what happens.
If I were going to be scientific about it I would keep a journal and track what plant got oolong, green, or black, etc., and track leaf amount, colors, etc. I'm not.
If I were going to be scientific about it I would keep a journal and track what plant got oolong, green, or black, etc., and track leaf amount, colors, etc. I'm not.
Last Edit:1 year 10 months ago
by Ivan Mann
Last edit: 1 year 10 months ago by Ivan Mann.
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