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<blockquote data-quote="Vermin93" data-source="post: 4151495" data-attributes="member: 9526"><p>I picked up 10 of the 40lb bags of pelletized lime just about every time I went to the lease and then I would spread it with an EarthWay 2050P push spreader that I bought for the purpose of liming and fertilizing small plots. Sometimes I bought the lime from the coop and sometimes I got it from Tractor Supply. I've probably spread around 60 bags of lime on that plot over the past 16 months, and I still have some more to go in order to reach a pH of around 7.0. </p><p></p><p>They say that pelletized lime can take up to 6 months to work it's way into the soil, so the sooner you start spreading lime, the better.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vermin93, post: 4151495, member: 9526"] I picked up 10 of the 40lb bags of pelletized lime just about every time I went to the lease and then I would spread it with an EarthWay 2050P push spreader that I bought for the purpose of liming and fertilizing small plots. Sometimes I bought the lime from the coop and sometimes I got it from Tractor Supply. I've probably spread around 60 bags of lime on that plot over the past 16 months, and I still have some more to go in order to reach a pH of around 7.0. They say that pelletized lime can take up to 6 months to work it's way into the soil, so the sooner you start spreading lime, the better. [/QUOTE]
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