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Blend your own granular. Customize your fertilizer to your lawns needs with this math. MATH INVOLVED, THIS MAY BE TOO ADVANCED OR EVEN DAUNTING FOR SOME. If you've taken a soil test and have seen the deficiencies in your lawn nutrients, you have many pathways on correcting those needed nutrients. One way is to put down fertilizer nutrients by themselves, another is to find a mixed ratio fertilizer to fit your needs. There are challenges to be faced with both of these options. The first is the high concentrations of single nutrients and the complexity of very low spreader settings. Getting a good dispersion on 1-2lbs of total material on small or medium sized lawns rarely works well. The second option may be limited to whats commercially available. This can be challenging if you are trying to get it all in equal forms to make the application simple. Sometimes you can find the right ratio fertilizer online, but the expense of shipping can be high for certain fertilizers from some retailers online. In this video I take Scott's Turf Builder 32-0-4 https://amzn.to/33x3aCx and blend it with Yard Mastery's Sulfate of Potash (SOP) 0-0-48. https://yardmastery.com/products/yard... Sulfate of potash can be purchased at many brick and mortar stores like Site One, Ewing Irrigation, Advanced Turf Solutions or in a pinch, on Amazon as well. The goal is to create a ready to use granular at a 1:1 ratio of N:K (nitrogen to potash). Here's the math: 1) Determine pounds needed via soil test 2) Create ratio based on total nutrients needed for the season 3) Determine Square footage of property 4) Choose granular products with highest available analysis (mixed or single) 5) Determine application rate per 1000ft square (apps per season) 6) Determine pounds of nutrient per application 7) LB/%= total amount of mix per nutrient (apply to each input) 8) Total and mix. Divide pounds of nutrient by total weight to find final analysis and amount needed per thousand. Seems complex? It is and it's not. While this isn't for everyone, coming up with a season long blend for your lawn can be a fun exercise and once down, you can have your season stored up in pails and ready for the next application or mix on your hopper the day you want to apply. For questions, reach out, [email protected] for soil test readings, shop.lawncology.com