Depends on the crop, soil type, yield goal, existing fertility analysis, and many other factors. That said, you won't get much green growth out of this blend used by itself. Nitrogen content is too low.
60 pounds of fertilizer, spread over the 12,000 square foot lawn, an acre is 43,560 square feet or 220 lbs +/-.
The 0-11-52 means 0% Nitrogen (N), 11% Phosphorous (P) and 52 Potassium (K). The ratio of P to K that you need is 35/60 or ~ 1/2, but the P to K ratio of your "fertilizer" is 11/52 or ~ 1/5. You should get a fertilizer with a ratio more in line with what you need or expect to have to apply multiple fertilizers. Here is how you work out how much to apply per acre for each nutrient. Using Potassium as an example lbs to apply per acre = <lbs nutrient required per acre> / <% nutrient> lbs K to apply per acre = 60 / 0.52 ~ 120 lbs But like I said you would not get the correct amount of P with this fertilizer.
If your aplication rate is 300 lbs per acre of 13/13/13, you need 100 lbs of 13/13/13.
$500.00 per acre multiplied by 56million acres?
Land per acre really depends on the location. Land on the water is much more expensive per acre than land in the city.
Land per acre really depends on the location. Land on the water is much more expensive per acre than land in the city.
2.5 per acre 2.5 cents per acreAbout two cents per acre.
2 cents per acre
None. Cows are not plants: they do not need fertilizer.
43,560 ft2 per acre.
About two cents per acre.
12.5 cents per acre