On 14 Jan 2005 at 10:18, Steven Wachs wrote:
It would take a very long time for the nail to break down. slow and steady
is a good thing.
Since I have gazillions of used horseshoe nails left lying
around in the barn and since I don't want them in my or my dog's
or family's feet, I pick them up when I see them. They're very
basic, soft, iron and rust quickly.
I do not know if the nail-in-the-pot theory is folklore, pure
hooey, or what, but I often stick a few in the pot with my
azaleas and gardenias which are the plants that will develop
chlorosis first.
The chlorosis seems to diminish -- though I'm also taking other,
more standard, steps.
FWIW, which isn't much.
Jim Lewis -
- Tallahassee, FL - Nature
encourages no looseness, pardons no errors. Ralph Waldo Emerson
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