Using coffee grounds as a garden fertilizer?

FLBound11

Earning My Ears
Joined
Jun 1, 2009
I've been gardening for years now, but you learn something new every day :) The lady in this video says to reuse your old coffee grounds and tea bags by putting them in your garden!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUy1OmWvpT0

I'm about to try it out this weekend on my tiny balcony garden, but has anyone actually done it before?
 
I have been feeding my roses coffee for years. They love it. Someone told me that any acid loving plant will like coffee grounds. My mother has been dumping her daily grounds in her front beds for years. Her daffodils come up much earlier than mine. Also I read that Starbucks saves its grounds to give to gardeners that ask for them. Great compost!:goodvibes
 
I use our daily grinds on our azela bushes for years now, they are beautiful every spring! Also have thrown some on the holly!!)
 
I use it around my roses (when I remember), not everyday but once or twice a week.
 


update: I just tried it out last weekend on my tomato plants, and they're doing great! It's an odd feeling at first, just tossing coffee grounds into the plants, but hey - it's good for the planet in so many ways :) I'm glad that you all confirmed that this works -- you should comment on that video so that everyone else watching knows that it works for you :)
 
update: I just tried it out last weekend on my tomato plants, and they're doing great! It's an odd feeling at first, just tossing coffee grounds into the plants, but hey - it's good for the planet in so many ways :) I'm glad that you all confirmed that this works -- you should comment on that video so that everyone else watching knows that it works for you :)

Glad it worked out for you!
 
Thanks! Me too--my plants are going to be quite happy :) And I've always hated throwing coffee grounds into the trash.

After seeing that video, does anyone else have other eco-conscious gardening tips?
 


I have used them.....I haven't found a difference.

I asked a friend who has a bit more gardening experience and she said that any flavor (or unflavored) coffee/tea grounds should work.

One other thing to keep in mind--if you watch that video closely, you're actually supposed to break open the tea bags *before* putting them in the garden. I know it might seem obvious, but not necessarily to a gardening newbie :)
 
Dittos, been doing it for years. Learned it from my grandmother who had prize winning roses. I don't know if it makes a difference. Another thing my Mom used to do is bury fish bones in her roses. :fish:
 
DebºoºS;33585899 said:
Dittos, been doing it for years. Learned it from my grandmother who had prize winning roses. I don't know if it makes a difference. Another thing my Mom used to do is bury fish bones in her roses. :fish:

Wow! If we can find out if the fish bones thing works, that would be the ultimate gardening tip to submit.

And even if we're not sure of how much of a difference the coffee grounds make on the growth of the plants...we do at least know that we're doing the right thing by composting those coffee grounds instead of putting them in a landfill!
 
Also I read that Starbucks saves its grounds to give to gardeners that ask for them.

I just wanted to confirm that, at least for the store I used to work at. I worked at a Starbucks licensed store for a while and we had people who'd ask us to save the grounds. They'd bring in a bucket and pick it up every couple of days. If you need that many grounds, it's worth it, since Starbucks goes through so much coffee in a day.
 
I've put coffee grounds in my compost for years, and the resulting mix has been very good medium for the garden. They do sell something stinky (the one I bought one time...years ago was awful!) called "fish emulsion" so I think the fish bone idea has merit!

Bobbi:goodvibes
 
When I put the coffee grounds in the soil I just scratch them in as a top layer. They're rich in nitrogen and break down quickly. Since I'm using K-cups more often now there's less of the grounds going into the ground.

Fish Meal fertilizer is nitrogen & phosphorus rich 10-5-0 and contains important trace elements and as Bobbi attests smells PU:snooty: Good for tomato plants. Here's more info than you probably care to know about fishmeal fertilizer http://www.rainyside.com/resources/fishfert.html

Bone Meal on the other hand is made from bones of slaughtered animals. Not as high in nitrogen only 4, but higher in phosphorus @ 12, potassium 0, also contains trace elements. This is the stuff you put in the hole with your bulbs. It's a basic slow release fertilizer.

As I mentioned my Mom showed me how to bury fish under crops, bushes and plants but it's been done in my family (both sides) for generations. I remember reading somewhere that the Indians would put one small whole fish in the hole for each corn plant. I bet if you asked around in your family they probably have a few fish buried in their gardens too.
 
I just wanted to confirm what a PP stated....Starbucks does giveaway their grounds...they should already be bagged up but if they are not just ask. I still work their and I hate throwing them away knowing they can reused! I even had a customers with blind dogs use for their pathway in her garden so they could smell their way to their "spot."
 
I just wanted to confirm what a PP stated....Starbucks does giveaway their grounds...they should already be bagged up but if they are not just ask. I still work their and I hate throwing them away knowing they can reused! I even had a customers with blind dogs use for their pathway in her garden so they could smell their way to their "spot."

Thanks, I'll ask at our local Starbucks. The last time I was there they were busy. Lining the pathway with grinds is ingenious!
 
hi am newbie here!...i also heard about that..putting tea bags on the garden...and i ve tried it and it has good result...before i use animal manure as a fertilizer it has good result also but...the disadvantage is that there are lots of flies flying around the area...it's disgusting though!
 
I used tea bags, broken open in my garden where I planted root crops. I would make a trench when planting and then sprinkle the tea leaves into it. Then place a bit of dirt over it and plant your seed on top of that. The result is that grubs don't like it and stay away from your root crops. I tried it with my rutabagas and it seemed to work pretty good.
 

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