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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Make your own organic fert.

    OK folks I have some spare fish parts lying around. Don't ask...
    How can I turn that into food for my ladies? I do not want to attract bears. They will eat my lovely ladies right up.
    epilepticme Reviewed by epilepticme on . Make your own organic fert. OK folks I have some spare fish parts lying around. Don't ask... How can I turn that into food for my ladies? I do not want to attract bears. They will eat my lovely ladies right up. Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Make your own organic fert.

    fish works great as a organic fert particularly the head of fish, contains organic nitrogen amino acids such as lysine, asparagine, glutamine, sertine, tyrosine, proline, nucleic acid, organic acid, vitamins, sugars and the like. AWSOME organic fert.

    I know some growers that barry the heads in there grow but you mentiond bears, this would be a problem as they will dig these up and prob destroy your plants in the process.

    I know you can boil and filter out the enzymes but this is a hard thing to do and theres alot of store bought products that allready have done this for us growers. Look for "Alaska Fish Fertilizer" I'm not sure its still around but its a good 100% organic fish fert. I think you should barry it in a compost and layer some green and brown on top and mix it up. You will get a nice fertile soil for next season if you do this. This way it has the right time to break down "takes like 2 months to naturally break down into dirt form" and you will then have some VERY fertile organic mix.

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Make your own organic fert.

    Hi,

    I don't know how you could do it without attracting critters. Fungus gnats could be problematic since they are attracted to organic material. If you could compost it first that would probably be your best bet.

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