Grow Unlimited Fertilizer In A Bucket. $0 Cost. Doubles Weekly. Why Don’t They Teach This?
There are three plants you can grow in a bucket right now, with zero money, that produce more usable fertilizer than anything sold at a garden center. None of them require soil. None of them need replanting. All three multiply on their own. Nobody teaches this in school.
The first is Azolla. A tiny aquatic fern that doubles its biomass every 2 to 10 days under basic conditions. Penn State research confirmed it captures nitrogen directly from the atmosphere through a symbiotic relationship with bacteria in its leaves. One hectare of Azolla fixes up to 128 kilograms of atmospheric nitrogen in 50 days. Asian rice farmers used it for over 2,000 years before synthetic fertilizer replaced it. It grows in a bucket of water placed in sunlight. Cost is zero.
The second is Duckweed. The fastest growing plant on Earth. It doubles in as little as 16 hours under optimal conditions. Its protein content reaches 45 percent dry weight. PMC 2021 confirmed it absorbs nitrogen and phosphorus from water and releases them directly back as fertilizer when composted. One bucket produces a continuous supply.
The third is Comfrey. Its taproot reaches 8 to 10 feet into the soil and mines potassium, phosphorus, calcium, and trace minerals that surface plants cannot reach. Its NPK profile is 1.8 to 0.5 to 5.3 in raw leaf form, rising to 8 to 3 to 20 as a concentrated liquid tea. Cut and drop four times per season. It regrows every time from the same root. Permanently.
The global synthetic fertilizer market is worth 349 billion dollars. Azolla, Duckweed, and Comfrey together cost nothing and outperform it biologically. The Haber-Bosch nitrogen synthesis process was invented in 1909. Before that, every farmer on Earth used biology. Then someone found a way to sell nitrogen in a bag.
Sources: Penn State 2024, PMC Azolla 2025, PMC Duckweed 2021, MDPI Agriculture 2024, ScienceDirect Azolla nitrogen fixation, GrowVeg Comfrey NPK, GlobeNewswire Fertilizer Market 2024
#azolla #duckweed #comfrey #freefertilizer #growyourfertilizer #organicgardening #selfsufficiency #permaculture #hiddenagriculture #syntheticfertilizer #nitrogenfix #biofertilizer #offgrid #homestead #growyourownfood #soilhealth #naturalfarming #bucketsystem #zerocostgarden #sustainablefarming

8 Comments
Won't mosquitoes breed in the water the azolla is growing in?
I thought they used HUMAN WASTE to fertilize their rice paddies
Azolla Comfrey Duckweed where can all of these be found? The video was not clear on this. Yeah, they don’t and never did teach anyone this even where to get it! The deception is complete; references requested!!!
I honestly had no idea a tiny plant like Azolla could do something this powerful. The idea that it can double every couple of days and turn sunlight, water, and air into real fertilizer is kind of mind-blowing. It makes you realize how many simple natural systems we’ve overlooked. Now I really want to try growing a bucket of this and see how it works in my own garden. Thanks for sharing such an eye-opening idea!
Give something about natural nematicide, fungicide,herbicide,pasticide.
ok thanks.
People are idiots. There is SO. MUCH FREE NÌTROGEN PLANTS, ITS NOT FUNNY.
This video made me remember something I thought I had forgotten.
When I was younger, my mother used to keep a small bucket of water behind our house. Inside it, there were tiny green plants floating on the surface. I once asked her why she didn’t just buy fertilizer like everyone else. She smiled and said, “Because the earth already knows how to take care of itself.”
At the time, I didn’t understand. I thought she was just trying to save money.
Years passed. Life became busier. I left home. And like many people, I started believing that everything we need must be bought, packaged, and sold.
Then today… I watched this video.
And suddenly, I saw that bucket again in my mind.
I remembered her hands, tired but gentle, touching the water every morning. I remembered how peaceful she looked, trusting something invisible, something natural.
She’s no longer here.
But now I finally understand what she was trying to show me…
That not everything valuable comes from a store.
Some of the most powerful things in life… grow quietly, for free.
I wish I had understood her sooner