landscaping in Summit County, CO

Why our fertilizer program works

  1. Provides Plant Nutrients that Promotes Rooting and Overall Plant Resilience.
  2. Stimulates Beneficial Microbial Populations to Enhance Nutrient Availability and Uptake.
  3. Delivers a Non Ionic Organic Wetting Agent to Improve Water Infiltration and Conservation.
  4. Provides a Slow, Sustainable Release of Nutrients.
  5. Promotes Nutrient Availability in All Soil Types and pH Levels.
  6. Delivers a Non Burning, Low Salt Nutrient to Maximize Plant Safety.

We strive to accomplish soil health by building Biodiversity with our fertilizer program. It is a 3 tier approach to build microbial life back into damaged soils. If you have good soil, you will have good roots, and your plants will flourish.

Mycorrhizae: It is all about putting microbes back into the soil. Mycorrhizae are naturally in the ground but when the ground gets disturbed, it kills the Mycorrhizae, and do not grow back quickly on their own. Mycorrhizae and roots have a symbiotic relationship providing each other with nutrients. The mycorrhizae will help the plant with water absorption and holding capacity.

Wetting agent: Colorado is an arid environment so a wetting agent is necessary to allow the water to penetrate the soil reducing the surface tension of water, allowing it to spread more easily and penetrate deeper into the soil, reaching the plant roots more effectively, so it is not lost to run off and evaporation. Wetting agents also help retain moisture in the soil so your plants will not dry out as fast.

Plant food: We use plant food to sustain long lasting nutritional energy made up of nutritional components that include carbohydrates, humic acids and yucca. These nutritional ingredients stimulate a wide range of beneficial soil microbial populations to enhance nutrient delivery.
We avoid using chemical fertilizers, even though they might be cheaper. Chemical fertilizers provide plants with a quick burst of growth but lack the energy value needed to build and sustain microbial life in the soil. In fact, today’s chemical management practices are detrimental to microbial life, leading to its destruction. As a result, the initial rapid growth is often followed by a prolonged period of nutrient deficiency.