Dry leaves costs jeevamrutham more ?

Excellent and very practical question! Let’s break it down:


๐Ÿ‚ If You Use Dry Leaves or Leaf-Stick Cutting Mulch:

You’re essentially adding extra organic matter (especially carbon-rich material) to the soil surface. This changes the microbial balance slightly.


๐Ÿงช How This Affects Jeevamrutham Usage

๐Ÿ”ฅ What Happens with Mulch:

  • Dry leaves/sticks = High carbon, low nitrogen
  • Soil microbes start decomposing mulch, and they need more nitrogen to do it.
  • If nitrogen isn’t available, microbes will pull nitrogen from the soil (called nitrogen immobilization), which can reduce growth in leafy vegetables (which are nitrogen-hungry).

โœ… So, Should You Increase Jeevamrutham Dose?

โœ”๏ธ YES โ€” But slightly and smartly.

Situation Jeevamrutham Strategy
Normal mulch (only dry leaves) Use standard 5โ€“7L per bed every 15 days
Heavy mulch (leaves + sticks powder) Increase to 7โ€“10L per bed, every 10โ€“12 days
Thick mulch + signs of slow growth Add extra cow urine or buttermilk to boost nitrogen and microbes
Beds with only sticks or husk mulch Add a layer of cow dung slurry or jeevamrutham + besan in early stage

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip:

To balance high-carbon mulch, add extra nitrogen/microbial energy into Jeevamrutham:

๐Ÿ” Modified Jeevamrutham for Mulched Beds:

Ingredient Normal For Mulched Beds
Cow dung 5 kg 5โ€“6 kg
Cow urine 5 L 6โ€“7 L
Jaggery 500 g 750 g
Gram flour 500 g 750 g
Water 60 L 60 L
Neem cake (optional) 0 500 g (for termite prevention)

๐Ÿ“Œ Summary

Question Answer
Use more Jeevamrutham for mulch? โœ… Yes, slightly more
Why? Mulch increases microbial activity, microbes need nitrogen, jeevamrutham balances it
Risk if not increased? Yellowing, slow growth in leafy greens
How much more? 20โ€“30% higher dosage or more frequent application

Would you like a comparison table PDF or bed-wise Jeevamrutham schedule for mulched vs non-mulched beds?