Thread: Wet Gromore
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Old 25-11-2013, 08:31 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Martin Brown Martin Brown is offline
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Default Wet Gromore

On 24/11/2013 14:56, Nick Maclaren wrote:
In article ,
Pam Moore wrote:
I have found in my garage a cardboard box of Gromore which has turned
wet; no wet in my garage; it must have absorbed damp from the
atmosphere.
What can I do with it. Can it go on the (small) compost bin, be
scattered round the garden, or dumped?
Luckily it's in a carrier bag; box too wet to pick up.
My garden is very small and currently an overgrown mess. No bare soil
to scatter it on!
Asvice please.


Scatter it, insofar as you can. Provided that it is not in TOO
large lumps or on top of green foliage, don't worry about it.


Or leave it somewhere to dry out and be prepared to hit it with a mallet
next year. I always buy my fertilisers out of sync with the seasons so
that I buy remaindered summer feeds when they want space for Halloween
demons and Santa's grotto (usually side by side) and spring weed 'n feed
when they want rid of that to make space for summer stuff.

If it gets wet it ends up rather clumpy but it is still good fertiliser
- just not quite as good as it was when new. It will lose some ammonia
content as a result but perfectly OK as a plant food. You will probably
lose more nutrients applying it to the garden now due to winter rains.

I try to keep mine hermetically sealed and if opened double bagged in
winter to avoid its tendency to be hydroscopic.

--
Regards,
Martin Brown