Johnny Appleseed Organic Launches First ‘No Kill’ Fertiliser
ClimateGard will be available for preorder through an Indiegogo campaign beginning March 9, 2021
Just in time for gardening season, Johnny Appleseed Organic has recently announced its newest product launch, ClimateGard, the first no-kill, premium, all-purpose, organic fertilizer with sustainable packaging. ClimateGard will be available for preorder through an Indiegogo campaign beginning March 9, 2021 and purchase through the campaign starting March 16, 2021, until April 22, 2021.
ClimateGard was designed for climate-conscious gardeners, small farmers, and home gardeners who care about the earth, where their food comes from, and want to aid in climate change reversal. ClimateGard's no-kill formula sources essential micronutrients, humic acid, silica, living bacteria and fungi from the most ethical, sustainable sources available. ClimateGard's blend of solar processed poultry manure, fossilized seabird guano, bat guano and sunflower hull ash provides essential nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium, calcium, iron and magnesium in their most bioavailable forms.
ClimateGard also offers sustainable packing and is delivered in an organic cotton bag with a compostable inner liner. By relying on reusable pallets made of recycled plastics, Johnny Appleseed Organic is doing its part to cut down any contribution to the waste stream.
ClimateGard is the first and only organic fertilizer scientifically designed to supercharge the soil-building effects of Climate Farming. Every fertilizer pellet contains a synergistic blend of micronutrients, living bacteria and fungi, to form the most complete plant and soil health package on the market. ClimateGard's ingredients are derived from ethical and environmentally friendly sources, the unique formula combines all the amendments used in Climate Farming into a single, convenient package.
ClimateGard is more than a great fertilizer, it is a part of a bigger cause to battle climate change and alter the conventional agriculture growing practices through Climate Farming.