This is great! I have 2 moringa trees in my yard. I often prune my trees and just throw the leaves away because I am the only one eating it. Now, I have another way of utilizing the leaves :)
I absolutely love moringa and eat it daily for needed nutrition, sprinkling a little over a spoon of seamoss. Didn't think about fertilizer but I learn something daily from yourselve and other fabulous gardeners on youtube. TFS!
@@JerrasGarden smh I've never heard of Either. I was kinda referring to something organic but that's one of the reasons why I rather not grow anything. Everything needs a certain this or that to grow it. I'm clueless of wat use. Want to grow things but ...
I put my moringa and comfrey leaves in a mesh laundry bag, hang it inside of a 20 gallon sports cooler and fill it with water and cap the lid. It steeps until i need it. It stinks to high heaven which is why David The Good calls it “swamp water” 😂
If your area does not get snow and not much freezing temperatures, then yes you should be able to grow it. I'm zone 10A and get a couple of nights where it drops to 30F, but just for a few hours and they are fine.
I'm in 9b too. Moringa grows no problem. Lows dips to 30 or even high 20's handful of times. A couple of times a year I see ice in a bucket full of water. You'd want to cut down the tree really low anyway before the winter. Cover the tree when you know hard freeze is coming. You'll see new growth in the spring even if it looks dead during the dormant period of time.
@@JerrasGarden thank you We do freeze here but if we have a mild winter it might do ok. I can make it a mini greenhouse with t-posts & plastic. Or maybe I can keep it in a large pot until spring. Either way I’m going to give it a try.
Look i did this like months back put find it was burning my plants like palm plant in pots and Broad leaf thyme. Anyone else get their burn even thought to mix it 1 part to 10 parts water?
Thanks for sharing. If Moringa isn’t available, it seems this technique can be applied to any type of leaves, as they all contain the essential micronutrients and NPK needed for plant growth.
Awesome. I grew a couple of moringa trees last year in a container. However, I didn’t know that I could use it for fertilizer. Thanks for sharing.
This is great! I have 2 moringa trees in my yard. I often prune my trees and just throw the leaves away because I am the only one eating it. Now, I have another way of utilizing the leaves :)
There are so many uses for moringa
Thank you for this amazing information!!
You are so welcome!
very informative video i love organic way of farming
Many many thanks
I absolutely love moringa and eat it daily for needed nutrition, sprinkling a little over a spoon of seamoss. Didn't think about fertilizer but I learn something daily from yourselve and other fabulous gardeners on youtube. TFS!
There are so many uses for Moringa. I'm sure more than I realize.
I wonder if I add it’s my hydroponics system
Great information. 💚
Glad it was helpful!
This is great I will be trying and ordering moringa 🎉❤
Wonderful!
Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!
How often do you use it on the plants? Once a week? Once a month? Also, what are the benefits from spraying on the leaves? Thank you
Once a week. Plants uptake nutrients through foilage too. Foliar sprays are great for fruit trees, especially citrus.
How often do you use this on tomato plant? Can this attract pest and flies when drench in soil?
Is there a substitute for moringa or wat could I use that's like it?
You can try comfrey
@@JerrasGarden smh I've never heard of Either. I was kinda referring to something organic but that's one of the reasons why I rather not grow anything. Everything needs a certain this or that to grow it. I'm clueless of wat use. Want to grow things but ...
I put my moringa and comfrey leaves in a mesh laundry bag, hang it inside of a 20 gallon sports cooler and fill it with water and cap the lid. It steeps until i need it. It stinks to high heaven which is why David The Good calls it “swamp water” 😂
Thats another way to make fertilizer. I like my method to avoid the smell LOL
I live in MD zone 7. If its not warm enough to grow moringa, what is another plant that will supply a similar qty of nutrients?
Comfrey would be an awesome option for you 😀
@@JerrasGarden Ok, thanks. I'll have to get some seeds. I thought about growing it years ago, but never did.
Amazing how to. ❤❤❤
Does moringa grow in 9b California.
If your area does not get snow and not much freezing temperatures, then yes you should be able to grow it. I'm zone 10A and get a couple of nights where it drops to 30F, but just for a few hours and they are fine.
I'm in 9b too. Moringa grows no problem. Lows dips to 30 or even high 20's handful of times. A couple of times a year I see ice in a bucket full of water. You'd want to cut down the tree really low anyway before the winter. Cover the tree when you know hard freeze is coming. You'll see new growth in the spring even if it looks dead during the dormant period of time.
@@hisremnant thank you 😊 ❤️
Hi Jerra, when you say fast growing tree, do you mean it grows in one season or a year or so?
I have several. They grow quickly. Every few weeks i chop off a section to use leaves etc and they regrow quickly.
It grows from seed very fast. In 1 year its a mini tree. And then it grows back very quickly after cutting/pruning it too.
@@JerrasGarden thank you
We do freeze here but if we have a mild winter it might do ok. I can make it a mini greenhouse with t-posts & plastic. Or maybe I can keep it in a large pot until spring. Either way I’m going to give it a try.
❤❤❤❤❤❤
Look i did this like months back put find it was burning my plants like palm plant in pots and Broad leaf thyme. Anyone else get their burn even thought to mix it 1 part to 10 parts water?
Do you sell people’s email addresses if they buy seeds from you??
No, email and all info is not shared.
Thanks for sharing. If Moringa isn’t available, it seems this technique can be applied to any type of leaves, as they all contain the essential micronutrients and NPK needed for plant growth.
Technically yes. But some plants are far more nutrient dense than others. Comfrey is another popular choice.