Marb, how much and how often do you apply chicken manure pellets to your tubs?
I'm thinking that this is the source of all your woes.
Chicken manure is NOT composted before being turned into pellets, which means that when "reconstituted" as it gets wet, it is undiluted "hot" manure you have mixed into the soil. I would not recommend using CM pellets in pots and tubs.
Used mushroom compost or other plant based compost would be what I'd use. Or seaweed solution.
Animal manure, and chicken in particular is high in nitrogen, but also in phosphorus. The plants take up nitrogen quickly, and any excess washes away with the rain or can become gaseous and evaporate. Phosphorus doesn't wash away, and doesn't convert to a gas. It stays in the soil, accumulating every time you add more of the fertiliser. This makes it harder for plants to take up other trace nutrients they need, and also, phosphorus apparently is toxic to the mycorrhizal fungi which enhance root growth in plants.
Do have a read of this page Too Much Compost - Is It Poisoning Your Garden? - Garden Myths
You'll see that over fertilisation may be the cause of your dreadful plague of pests too.
I'm thinking that this is the source of all your woes.
Chicken manure is NOT composted before being turned into pellets, which means that when "reconstituted" as it gets wet, it is undiluted "hot" manure you have mixed into the soil. I would not recommend using CM pellets in pots and tubs.
Used mushroom compost or other plant based compost would be what I'd use. Or seaweed solution.
Animal manure, and chicken in particular is high in nitrogen, but also in phosphorus. The plants take up nitrogen quickly, and any excess washes away with the rain or can become gaseous and evaporate. Phosphorus doesn't wash away, and doesn't convert to a gas. It stays in the soil, accumulating every time you add more of the fertiliser. This makes it harder for plants to take up other trace nutrients they need, and also, phosphorus apparently is toxic to the mycorrhizal fungi which enhance root growth in plants.
Do have a read of this page Too Much Compost - Is It Poisoning Your Garden? - Garden Myths
You'll see that over fertilisation may be the cause of your dreadful plague of pests too.
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