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  2. Your Starter Guide to What Plants Like Coffee Grounds ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/starter-guide-plants-coffee-grounds...

    “More people are thinking of creative ways to put food waste to good use and coffee grounds can make a great addition to your fertilizer,” she says. Often, Marino says, people have mixed ...

  3. Here's What You Should Know About Using Coffee Grounds on ...

    www.aol.com/heres-know-using-coffee-grounds...

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  4. Yes, You Can Use Coffee Grounds to Fertilize Your Plants ...

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  5. Used coffee grounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Used_coffee_grounds

    The dry coffee grounds contain significant amounts of potassium (11.7 g/kg), nitrogen (27.9 g/kg), magnesium (1.9 g/kg), and phosphorus (1.8 g/kg). [5] The quantity of caffeine remaining in used coffee grounds is around 48% of that in fresh coffee grounds. [6] There are significantly less tannins in used coffee grounds than fresh coffee grounds ...

  6. Soil conditioner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_conditioner

    A wide variety of materials have been described as soil conditioners due to their ability to improve soil quality. Some examples include biochar, [3] bone meal, blood meal, coffee grounds, compost, compost tea, coir, manure, [4] straw, peat, sphagnum moss, vermiculite, sulfur, lime, hydroabsorbant polymers, [5] biosolids, [6] and rock flour.

  7. Organic coffee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_coffee

    Coffee pulp is the outside of the plant that can be salvaged and returned to the soil as an organic fertilizer. Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium are the major nutrients that coffee plants need so by using the coffee pulp, cattle manure, bocachi and compost, and chicken manure and biogreen, farmers are able to supply those essential nutrients ...

  8. 14 Surprising Uses for Coffee Grounds - AOL

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    Sprinkle coffee grounds whenever you need to scare away ants, snails or slugs: These critters are offended by the strong smell, so this is an easy, waste-free way to keep them off your property ...

  9. Bokashi (horticulture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bokashi_(horticulture)

    A soil ball with indigenous worms in soil amended a few weeks previously with bokashi fermented matter. Bokashi is a process that converts food waste and similar organic matter into a soil amendment which adds nutrients and improves soil texture. It differs from traditional composting methods in several respects. The most important are: