does no one have any info for me??
I am not an expert, at least not on plant fertilizer. But I could venture a reasonable guess based on the laws required for labeling a product.
Now keeping in mind that fertilizer for plants does not fit under the category as a food for human consumption, but that there must be some kind of loose guidelines that a company must use to put something on their label, an educated guess would be that the base or stock of this fertilizer was obtained from organic sources. My educated guess would be that their are other constituents of this fertilizer that are not derived from an organic source.
An example would be they cooked this fertilizer down from Cow Manure till they got a liquid, then added extra potassium and phosphorus in which case they could not call this all organic. Both potassium and phosphorus are chemical elements found on the periodic table. Both could be safely added in their chemical form and be safe for plant and ultimately human consumption, yet neither would qualify as an organic. By adding anything to the organic base the company could no longer claim that it was an organic fertilizer. (You could compare this to a soup that uses chicken stock, ie: the stock/liqiud is the broth obtained off of the cooked chicken bones and meat, then you throw a bunch of stuff in and end up with chicken noodle soup with veggies added!, it is not salty enough and you add sodium, wanna make it more tasty add a little msg)
This is all theoretical here as I do not know how FF makes their fertilizers or what is added or not.
Unless the company were to give you a complete breakdown of how exactly they make there fertilizer and what they add you will never know.
By the way I theorize what I have said above based on how the government requires labeling of vitamins and other nutritional supplements. I do have some expertise in health and animal nutrition, holding a degree in nutrition science.
Hope this helps a little!!!
