Vermont Compost Jolly Roger™

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Vermont Compost Jolly Roger™

Sick and tired of poor yields from your container-grown cannabis or hemp? Ahoy, matey, this flowering and fruiting mix is for you! Once plants are established enough to transplant into Jolly Roger, we’re sure you’ll be shouting “shiver me timbers!” as you witness a vigorous vegetative phase and an abundant booty-ful harvest. Also great for tomatoes and other vegetables, flowers or houseplants that need high fertility. For this finishing mix, be sure to use a container size commensurate with the size of the plant you hope to grow; smaller pots will limit yield potential.

Not recommended for cloning or germination. Contains manure compost, sphagnum peat, granite meal, basalt, coconut coir, blood meal, feather meal, kelp meal, gypsum, bone meal, vermiculite and perlite. Made in Vermont. Also available in 2 cubic yard totes. MOFGA.


8370 Vermont Compost Jolly Roger™
Item Discounted
From
Quantity
A: 60 qt $76.00
   MOFGA Approved
C: 45 qt $61.00
   MOFGA Approved
currently on backorder
D: pallet 35 45 qt bags $1890.00
   MOFGA Approved
$2100.00
low stock

Additional Information

Organic Certification

Inoculants, soil amendments, fertilizers, livestock supplies and pesticides are labeled as:
OMRI: Organic Materials Review Institute. Most state certifying agencies, including MOFGA, accept OMRI approval.
MOFGA: Reviewed and approved by the Maine Organic Farmers & Gardeners Association Certification Services. Allowed for use on MOFGA-certified farms. Check with your certifier.
WSDA: Listed by the Washington State Department of Agriculture’s Organic Certification division for use in organic agriculture in Washington State. MOFGA has indicated that they will accept products on this list for their certification program. Check with your certifier.
Nat’l List: One-ingredient products on the NOP* List of Allowed Substances (subpart G of the Organic Foods Production Act, sections 205.601-606). Check with your certifier.
AYC: Ask your certifier. Has not been reviewed by a certifier, but the active ingredient is allowed. Ask your certifier.
Not Allowed: A few of the products we list are not allowed for organic production but we think they have a place in sensible agriculture and can be used when certification is not an issue.