IMHO most people make things worse when they try to treat a deficiency head on, in other words they screw it up. I never recommend treating plants for just one issue, most times your wrong and do more harm. I say this as the mobility of some elements depends on the availability of other elements in the plant. For example: when the level of nitrogen drops it causes other elements to lock up. Magnesium is a good example, low nitrogen and the mag locks. [FONT="]
Most bags of lime carry the recommendation to use in the fall so it can age, they also recommend you don't use lime and fertilizer together in the same year. Lots of people mix and use but that does not mean it's right, there may be some that can be used right away but I have yet see any. Dolomite Lime has way to much magnesium in it so I never use it. The lime industry has done a good job of convincing us we need it but tossing in line is more likely to upset the balance than help. There are much better ways to get what you need than Dolo. If your looking for calcium then use gypsum to add more calcium.
Another good additive is Green Sand or glacial rock. Green sand contains iron-potassium silicate, 7% potash, sulphur, boron, iron, manganese and zink. It comes for the ocean and is made of seashells and organic matter. It will improve the tilth of the soil and increase the water holding capacity of sandy soils. You can apply anytime. You can find it at garden centers.
Here’s The Important Part[/FONT]
The main point I want to make is that even if minerals are leaching from your soil, it doesn’t make sense to blindly go back adding just two of them (the calcium and magnesium in dolomite lime) without knowing you need them. You might already have enough or too much of one or both of them. We need to think a little more than that when organic gardening.
Your soil needs a calcium:magnesium of somewhere between 7:1 (sandier soils) and 10:1 (clayier soils). Outside of this range, your soil will have water problems, your plants will have health problems and insect and disease problems, and you will have weed problems.
One of your most important goals in the garden is to add specific mineral fertilizers to move the calcium to magnesium ratio towards this range. As a side note, I understand it may seem strange to some that we should have to do this, but our soils are way out of balance and we’re trying to grow things that wouldn’t naturally grow there, so we have to do this.
The problem with dolomite lime? It has a calcium:magnesium ratio of 2:1. That’s way too much magnesium for most soils. Magnesium is certainly an essential mineral. Too much of it, however, causes many problems, compaction being one of the most common, but also pest and weed problems.
So if you add this to your garden every year, chances are you’re just causing more compaction and weed problems.
When Should You Use Dolomite Lime?
You should only use dolomite lime when you have a soil test showing a huge deficiency of magnesium in your soil.
Even then, calcitic lime (calcium carbonate) is generally the way to go because it has a small amount of magnesium and often a calcium:magnesium ratio of about 10:1, with a calcium content 34% to 40% or more.
I use calcitic lime regularly in my organic gardening, but even then, only when I need it. A soil test is the main way to find out if you need it.[FONT="][/FONT]