6 Ways To Incorporate Leftover Eggshells Into A Garden

It’s easy to think of eggshells as a pesky layer between you and the liquid gold inside. And when those little bits and pieces sneak into your mixing bowl, undetected? Ugh. Say bye to a perfectly smooth omelet! Eggshells can be difficult to peel and tiresome to remove, making it all that much more annoying to get to the good stuff that lives beyond the shell.

But prepare to stand corrected. This crackly outer layer is more valuable than you think, providing way more benefits than nuisances. Nutrient-dense eggshells are 93-97% calcium carbonate, providing two grams of calcium per shell. Plus, they’re packed with nitrogen and phosphoric acid, armed with all the nutrients your garden needs to thrive.

Here are six reasons to hold on to your eggshells instead of tossing them out.

6. Reuse To Grow Seedlings Indoors
This spring, get an indoor head start by planting little seedlings in the leftover egg cavity. Simply fill with a few tablespoons of soil and add your seeds. When the seedling has outgrown its comfy eggshell home, place the whole thing directly into the dirt outside. The shell will eventually decompose and fertilize the surrounding soil.

5. Make Compost More Nutrient-Rich
Rather than correcting acidity problems with lime in your compost (the main ingredient in lime is calcium-carbonate), use your Sunday brunch’s leftover eggshells. Loosely crush and add them straight to your compost.

4. DIY Fertilizer In The Garden
Plants love their nutrients and need calcium, phosphorus, sulfur, and potassium to grow big and healthy. Coincidentally, eggshells have all that, and they’re just sitting around waiting for a second chance! Grind them up in a blender into powder form and integrate really well into the dirt with your hands or shovel.

Watch the video below for the remaining tips that show the household advantages of keeping eggshells around after your breakfast burrito.


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