🌿 Grow Your Garden, Grow Your Community!
Jobe’s Organics Garden Fertilizer Spikes offer a convenient and eco-friendly solution for nourishing fruit and citrus plants. Each package contains 6 organic spikes formulated with a balanced 3-5-5 NPK ratio, ensuring your plants receive the essential nutrients they need without the risk of over-fertilization. OMRI certified and easy to apply, these spikes are perfect for any gardener looking to enhance their garden sustainably.
Item Weight | 240 Grams |
Mixing Ratio | 3-5-5 |
Specific Uses For Product | Plant Growth,Root Development,Seed Developmen,tSoil Conditioning |
Target Species | Fruit Trees |
Coverage | Medium |
Item Form | Sticks |
H**.
Worked for indoor lemon tree
Our indoor lemon tree was no thriving and I used these and now it is doing great. Its easy to use. Just put them under the soil. It a good value because it worked.
J**B
Holy blooms!
My lemon & lime bushes have had more blooms than ever after 2 months of using these. I now have them in autoship!
S**E
It's working wonders
This was my second order. It's worked wonders on my passion vine. It usually looks scrawny from half way down to the bottom, but this year, after using this fertilizer, (first used March 14th) its growth exploded and it's full all the way to the soil line. Today saw the vines first blooms of the year. It hasn't produced fruit in the past few years so hopefully this year it will.I can't say it's done anything for my lemon tree at this point. I did plant the citrus tree (was in a pot) and I think maybe it just doesn't like being in the ground. We shall see. I'll give that one more time.
A**N
My lemon tree improved immediately, but...
I have a lemon tree in my classroom that I have nurtured and cared for since September. It has exactly 4 leaves. Today, this pitiful tree almost single handedly (handedly?) sabotaged state testing and nearly took out an entire office of Minnesota foresters. In short, it attacked at the state and county levels. It was a systematic attack, patient and stealthy.Here is a detailed log of the attack and it's victims:Monday: observation of several adults and students - it smells like feet in here (my classroom). *I work with junior highers, it's very possible.Tuesday: one students commented that "it smells like dookie" in my room. *Not the vibe I'm going for so I start sniffing classroom plants to check for rotting leaves.Wednesday: Adults agree there's a certain "rot" essence to my room even before student presence has had the opportunity to influence the air quality of my room. *I fire up a glade air freshener and double down on the thieves oil in my diffuser while I blame the food program upwind in the air exchange system.-One para went home early and the other one didn't come in. I suspect it's the growing gag factor of my room.Thursday (today): I unlock my room to a wall of stink that hit with a force equal to the Axe wielding Jocks' locker room.No.I cannot live like this.2 paras preemptively called in to work today. They can't face the smell either, and they're seasoned vets who work with pungent preteens on a Daily basis.I sent my innocent 6 year old head first into my cabinet to check for forgotten food.Nothing.I checked my radiator for a cruel prank/hazing event.Clear.And then I turned my attention to my precious, fragile lemon tree with 4 leaves and all of the new buds that it's developed... since I put that fertilizer spike in it last week..........A sniff and a gag later I was on the phone with my husband to see if he could remove the offensive deciduent before classes start.He came to my rescue and upon receiving the unpresuming tree says, "It's not that bad"A sniff and a gag later, it was on its way to the land and minerals department.The receptionist took pity on the citrus tree with only 4 leaves and offered it a home in her South facing window. "It can't be that bad".A contaminated air space and a gag later, my husband receives a phone call:"Come remove your wife's tree from the lobby."So the tree was brought to the basement to live amongst foresters and their work clothes and items they bring in from the woods, surely the smell will not prevail in this environment....Complaints were filed within the hour.Evicted.Jobes, I don't know what you're putting in your "container citrus tree" fertilizer spikes, but they should not be used anywhere near living creatures with noses.
T**H
What my Meyer Lemon tree needed
Okay, I have two small Meyer Lemon plants. Each year, I put them outdoors in my Chicago area yard and they love the climate. I bring them indoors and every year, they drop leaves like CRAZY. I'm talking almost bare twigs. They are doing it again, and it does look strange--4 lemons of various size, 2 nearly full size, and hardly any leaves. In desperation, I purchased these stakes. I put two in each pot, and while there has still been drop leaves, I was impressed to discover new growth AND, on one of the plants, 6 clusters of new flower buds! I have hopes that there will be new growth on both plants, but I can honestly say that this didn't happen with a different plant fertilizer that I had tried last winter. Fingers crossed!
S**S
Ok
It’s ok, easy to use but I haven’t seen any impact to my lemon tree
D**H
Limes lemons and oranges
I bought these for our potted lime, lemon and orange trees. They work wonders and produced so much fruit on the 2nd year. I am looking forward to the 3rd and 4th years. A family member asked what I was doing and aside from watering the trees, I use 2 of these per pot. They work wonders! I plan to buy the cypress tree and rose versions this spring.
C**Z
Buy it!
This stuff is the bees knees. I use this for a Keylime and a Meijer lemon tree. I have had tons of blooms! Hoping for fruit this summer!
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