Could Eggshells for Plants Make Your Greenery Grow?
Garden eggshells for plants

Would Leftover Eggshells Help Your Plants?

Eggs already cost enough. After buying them for your baked and breakfast needs, could the eggshells work for your plants?

January 27, 2025 at 5:51 AM PST
Garden eggshells for plants

Would Leftover Eggshells Help Your Plants?

Eggs already cost enough. After buying them for your baked and breakfast needs, could the eggshells work for your plants?

January 27, 2025 at 5:51 AM PST

Walk into a grocery store right now for eggs, and expect to spend around $4.15 for a dozen Grade A. Even if you aren’t a vegan, it’s enough to make you reconsider these egg substitutes. But if you’re determined to buy eggs anyway, are there other ways to make the most of your money? Turns out that plant care may be one option.

Do Eggshells for Plants Help Them Grow?

While your friends would never let you live it down if eggshells were in the breakfast brunch, it turns out that they’re healthy for other types of living objects. Eggshells are made of calcium carbonate, which is found in teeth and fingernails. The shells also contain magnesium, selenium and strontium. This natural source of calcium can help plant growth. How? Similar to how calcium prevents human bone breakage, for plants, it helps to strengthen cell walls and support root development.

It also reduces the risk of some plant diseases, such as blossom end rot in tomatoes and peppers. (You’ll know if your garden has blossom end rot because there will be a dark “bruised” area on the bottom of the plant.)

How Do You Incorporate Eggshells In Plants?

There’s not a lot of labor involved in adding eggshells to plants. You can simply crush eggshells. Then, mix them into the soil. Or, sprinkle the shells on top of the soil around the base of the plants. Eventually, the shells will break down and release calcium.

Is Eggshell Tea Good for Plants?

Keep in mind that broken eggshells can attract raccoons in your garden and mice in your home. For this reason, sometimes green thumbers prefer to soak crushed eggshells to make an eggshell tea. To make the tea, boil a gallon of water. Then, add 10 to 20 clean eggshells to steep overnight. Those soaked eggshells will still have their original shape (if not crunched up) and color, but the egg shell tea will look like foggy water. Once it’s soaked, the eggshell tea can be poured onto plants. On a weekly basis, pour approximately two cups of the egg shell tea directly onto the soil.

Blueberries on a table
Orlando Rey

Are There Plants That Eggshells Don’t Work On?

You may have a solid routine for watering and fertilizing a bunch of your plants, and a perfect plant rack and hanging hook for a couple others. But there’s always that one plant that wants to rebel against your plant-loving norms. Plants that prefer acidic oil aren’t fond of eggshell tea or eggshells as plant food. Acidic-soil-loving plants include azaleas, blueberries, ferns and rhododendrons. Eggshells raise the soil pH, making it more alkaline and potentially killing the plants. So before you get ready to empty your compost bin, know which plants are egg-friendly and which ones should stay far away from those shells.

If you’re a first-timer and nervous about eggshells for plants, test the waters with one plant and see how it goes. If it works out, continue onward, carefully watching how each plant behaves with this new plant treatment. When it all works out, now you can sigh a little less when you’re at the grocery store checkout lane.



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