FoodUnlock your garden's potential with potato peel power

Unlock your garden's potential with potato peel power

Potato peels are often seen as waste and usually in the trash. If you throw them into the bio-waste bin, there's a chance they will still benefit the world. However, you gain much more when you take action yourself. Since discovering the wonders they can do in a home garden, I've stopped throwing away potato peels. They become instrumental in the summer; until then, you can store them in the freezer.

Potato peels are full of valuable elements.
Potato peels are full of valuable elements.
Images source: © Adobe Stock

Potato peels are rich in valuable nutrients such as potassium, phosphorus, magnesium, calcium, sodium, iron, zinc, and manganese. For this reason, they are an excellent natural fertilizer for many flowering plants. Unfortunately, fertilizer made from potato peels is not practical in every case. So before you start watering your tomatoes with it, check which plants it benefits and which it might harm.

What to water with potato peel fertilizer?

Fertilizer from peels is recommended for strengthening raspberries, currants, gooseberries, strawberries, and flowering and decorative plants outside the garden. Raspberries will particularly benefit from its valuable properties. The high potassium and phosphorus content will accelerate the flowering process, resulting in fruit.

Which plants should not use this fertilizer?

Potato peels are unsuitable for acid-loving plants such as blueberries, cranberries, or rhododendrons. They are also not suitable for watering vegetables from the nightshade family, such as peppers and tomatoes, because they can carry potato blight.

Storing potato peels for fertilizer

Before you prepare the fertilizer, you need to collect a sufficient amount of potato peels. You can store scraps in sealed zip-lock bags in the freezer. Another clever way to store leftovers is to dry them in the oven.

How to do it? Spread them on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper and place them in an oven preheated to 212 degrees Fahrenheit for 2-4 hours. When they become brittle, it's a sign you can take them out. Store the prepared peels in a dry and cool place.

How to make fertilizer from peels?

Pour boiling water over frozen or dried peels in a 1:10 ratio, using 1 pound of peels with 1.3 gallons of water. Let it cool, strain it through a sieve and pour it into a bottle. Water plants with this fertilizer every 3-4 weeks.

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