Their excess could represent a hazard to your family or pets

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Your garden soil might be hazardous to your family and harvest!

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It is nearly impossible to visually differentiate hazardous agents, but what about a proper chemical analysis?

It's time to get to know your garden better!

Plants need nutrients to grow healthy and produce better harvests:  do they get enough?

Check the health of your garden and tomato plant

Soils, like those in your garden, can contain high levels of natural and anthropogenic contaminants. They tend to accumulate due to various processes, ranging from the weathering of rocks and minerals to improper accidental or illegal hazardous waste disposal by mines and factories

What can be in there?

Pesticides and cleaning agents

Rusty metal

Your land and soil might contain substances such as petroleum, hydrocarbons, fossil fuel, gasoline, kerosene, asphalt, fuel oil, jet fuel, diesel fuel, heating oil, tar, paraffin wax, lubricants, propane, natural gas, petrochemicals hazardous to your soils
Check your garden for rusty metals, iron, oxides, scrapyard, nails, cars, hardware, containers, barrels and other stuff

Petroleum products (oil, gasoline)

Check your garden for cleaning agents
Check your garden for pesticides and herbicides
Check your garden for raticides, that help eliminate rat pests
Check your soil for fertilizers. There might be nitrogen used for leaf growth; phosphorus for development of roots, flowers, seeds, fruit; potassium for strong stem growth, movement of water in plants, promotion of flowering and fruiting

Fertilizers

Old batteries

Check your garden or lawn for old and dead automotive batteries (lead-acid)

Trace elements

Organic compounds

Macronutrients and micronutrients

Salts

Their insufficency might slow a healthy growth of your plants

Balance is key

The geographic proximity to the possible contamination source matters: how far or close?

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