It is important to note that Stress Blend has no phosphorous, where Milorganite does have phosphorous. A lot of soil in the south already has too much phosphorous so applying Milorganite over time in high phosphorous soil is not a good solution at all.
@alexanderkennedy2969 How is this big gov? Ryan Korr the lawn guy, not the gov, started the Milorganite rebellion 4 years ago when it was all the rage, because of Milo's higher phosphorous content. Milo is fine forever if your lawn has low phosphorous but there are better alternatives now for high phosphorus soil as in the south where I live.
@@BlacGyver if you knew the numbers and what they meant then you just threw what you said in the video out the window. That stress blend is not even remotely close to “basically milorganite” milorganite has phosphorus, which stress blend does not, stress blend also has potassium, milorganite does not, it even has a higher iron rating than milorganite so where do they even come close besides that they’re both a fertilizer
@KDlGG you need to up your listening skills.. Yardestry states on the bag that its like milorganite sourced from a different location. The biggest difference between the 2 is the potash. Why don't you call the manufacturer and tell them that they don't know what the numbers mean. When you find out, no need to apologize because most people are ignorant when it comes to synthetic fertilizers.
@@BlacGyver you realize yard mastery has a RU-vid channel, I’ve talked to him they’re similar in the way every fertilizer is similar. Why don’t YOU contact them and get back at them