also, sea spray, it could be partly to do with pH, sea water is slightly acidic, pure sodium chloride solution is pH 6.3

i'd guess that probably some lime will help too, i think i can get that from the local hardware store, i'll stick to foliar spraying the magnesium sulfate tho, will be fun to walk around with the sprayer every few days in the evening to give them a feed

i'm thinking about it mainly because it just looks sad with all the yellowing and slow growth, while i see almost everywhere else everything is booming righ now

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i paid attention to all the plants as i was walking up the hill to go to the shop just now and i noticed that it is a somewhat common problem all around here, and even the leaves on the grapes next door seem to be suffering this

since it basically affects all plants i can see around, it definitely is some combination of pH too acidic and maybe insufficient magnesium in the soil

i strongly suspect the pH so i probably will also try and track down a sack of lime to sweeten the soil a bit, as they say. idk why they say that, lime is astringent, not quite bitter, magnesium, however, is slightly sweet

oh yeah, and a universal thing to do, add carbon to the soil, in this case, i bought 4kg of sugar and will cut a small hole in the bags and sprinkle it all over the garden area... carbon improves soil's nutrient buffering capacity by feeding bacteria that produce goop that has an ion exchange effect... i also thought about this too - to maybe put my cat's used litter, which will be full of ammonia, and scatter it sparingly over the ground to boost the nitrogen, since that also helps with green and growth