Why Early Spring Soil Nutrition Determines Your Entire Harvest

Every growing season begins long before the first seeds emerge from the soil. Experienced farmers know that the success of a crop is often decided weeks or even months before planting. Early spring soil nutrition is one of the most important factors that influences crop establishment, plant vigor, and ultimately harvest yield. When soil fertility […]
March-Ready Fertility Plan: The February Decisions That Pay Off in the PNW

By late February, most Pacific Northwest growers and property managers feel the same mix of impatience and caution. Spring is close enough to plan for, but the weather is still capable of punishing the wrong fertilizer decision. This is where a March-ready fertility plan matters. A March-ready plan is not a full spring program written […]
Fertilizer on Slopes and Heavy Soils: PNW-Friendly Ways to Reduce Runoff Risk

The Pacific Northwest has two landscape features that make fertilizer work more interesting than it should be: slopes and heavy soils. Plenty of properties have both. A hillside lawn that looks perfect in July can become a runoff machine in February. A clay-heavy landscape bed can hold water for days, then suddenly shed it in […]
Calibrating Spreaders and Sprayers for Fertilizer: Cleaner Coverage, Better Results in the PNW

A lot of fertilizer “problems” are not nutrient problems. They are coverage problems. In February, coverage matters even more because weather windows are narrow. When you finally get a workable day, you want that application to count. Uneven fertilizer distribution shows up as stripes in turf, patchy growth in beds, and inconsistent response in fields. […]
Avoiding Fertilizer Burn in Cool, Wet Conditions: Rates, Salt Load, and Timing in the PNW

Fertilizer burn is usually discussed like it only happens in summer heat. In the Pacific Northwest, burn can still happen in February, just for slightly different reasons. It is less about scorching sun and more about concentration, uneven application, and placing fertilizer where it sits against plant tissue or roots that are already stressed by […]
Controlled-Release Fertilizer Labels: How to Choose the Right Release Window for the PNW

Controlled-release fertilizers can be a real advantage in the Pacific Northwest, especially in February. When soils are cold and rainfall is frequent, you want nutrients to stay useful long enough for roots to actually use them. A controlled-release product is designed to do exactly that. The challenge is that the words on the bag do […]
Organic vs Conventional Fertilizers in Cold Weather: What Performs Differently in the PNW

February in the Pacific Northwest is when fertilizer decisions get judged by reality instead of intention. Soil is cold. Rain is frequent. Roots are slow. And a fertilizer that performs beautifully in May can feel like it did nothing in February. A lot of that comes down to one simple question: is your fertilizer relying […]
Late Winter Orchard Fertility in the PNW: Setting Up Apples, Pears, Cherries, and Home Fruit Trees for Spring

Orchard nutrition is easiest to manage when you treat it like a calendar and a conversation at the same time. The calendar matters because trees change their nutrient demand fast as buds swell and growth begins. The conversation matters because your soil, your variety, your crop load history, and your pruning goals decide what “right” […]
Feeding Blueberries Before Budbreak: Fertilizer Timing That Works in PNW Acid Soils

Blueberries can be wonderfully productive in the Pacific Northwest, but they are also honest. If the soil pH is drifting up, or if the nitrogen form is wrong, they show it. Pale leaves, slow growth, weak flowering, and berries that never quite size up are common signals that the fertility program is not matching what […]
Fertilizing Perennials in Late Winter: What Helps Spring Growth Most in the PNW

Perennials are a long game. Shrubs, ornamental grasses, berry plantings, herb borders, and flowering beds all have one thing in common: the fertilizer decisions you make now will shape how they wake up and how they perform for months. February in the Pacific Northwest is not the time to push perennials hard. Soil is still […]