Maximum Yield USA June 2018 | Page 71

S ome growers are put off by the idea of using organic methods, such as making your own compost tea or worm composting, because it is considered more difficult and time consuming. There is, however, a product that is widely available and easy to use. It is a balanced, natural organic fertilizer used for fruiting and flowering plants. That product is guano, most commonly sourced from bat feces. In farming and gardening, guano has many uses. The Gift of Guano The word “guano” originated from the Andes area of South America and refers to any feces (usually sea birds and bats) used for crop fertilization. Andean people are believed to have started using it for this purpose more than 1,500 years ago, collecting it from small islands off the desert coast of Peru. Guano is found in extremely dry climates where rainwater cannot leach the nitrogen-rich ammonia out of the guano. Islands and coastlines “Bat guano is sourced from rainforest caves in locations like Madagascar and Indonesia, where insects and fruit are plentiful.” where there is intense marine upwelling, such as along the eastern side of the Pacific and South Atlantic oceans, are the perfect location because large colonies of marine birds congregate for easy access to their respective food sources, which include, fish, insects, and fruit. Bat guano is sourced from rainforest caves in locations like Madagascar and Indonesia, where insects and fruit are plentiful, and the guano is unaffected by climatic changes, preventing any leaching of nutrients. Maximum Yield 71