Welcome to Golden Bay Dolomite
Dolomite is a Calcium Magnesium Carbonate occurring as a completely natural rock deposit found in New Zealand only at Mount Burnett in Golden Bay






To determine the base saturation first we need to know the “Total exchange capacity”, this will tell us the nutrient holding ability of your soil.
We must then measure the percentages of each of the main Cations - Calcium, Magnesium, Potassium and Sodium and adjust them to the ideal levels that will help grow crops and pastures to their maximum potential.
This will also improve the environment for the soil biology, which is absolutely critical in the processing of nutrient for plants. Many minerals are not available to plants directly and need to be ‘reduced’ through a biological process to change them into plant available forms.
It is not about flooding the soil with any one element but rather a balancing act of all essential minerals. Look at the most limiting nutrient first ‘Law of the minimum’ when prioritising budget, then the next limiting, and so on.
Magnesium levels need to be adjusted to a specific base saturation percentage (see graph below)
Not enough magnesium means a deficiency to the plant, but if the magnesium level climbs to high this can also limit uptake.
Calcium should occupy the most sites on the soil colloids and is the king of all nutrients.
We must try and achieve the ideal BS of calcium as an excessive liming programme will increase calcium levels to a point where it may ‘tie up’ other elements.
Potassium is another of the main nutrients to have in the right B.S. percentage. Ideally 5% is the excellent level or up to 7% for woody crops like grape vines or fruit trees.
It is very important to have Potassium levels higher than Sodium as the plant will take up whichever one is at the higher level. We therefore want to avoid excessive Sodium uptake which may cause cell degradation (wilting) and yellowing in crops.
When micro nutrients are present in the soil in adequate amounts, and the soil has the right base saturation percentages, they are at their most available.
It is not correct to say balance the soil and micronutrients will take care of themselves; some soils simply do not contain adequate amounts of micronutrients. However, if they are already there and tied up by excesses, they will be released as the excesses are brought under control.
Listed below are the optimum cation base saturation percentages for most soils.
Base Percentage

VIEW PERCENT BASE SATURATION >>
True soil balance means determining and adding the proper amount of each nutrient only when required. Fertility is the balance between all elements. Not only is each element necessary individually, but a balance of all these elements is necessary ‘collectively’.
Achieving the above means improved nutrient availability and proper plant nutrition.
Soil pH is determined by the four main cations; Calcium, Magnesium, Potassium and Sodium.
Each of these elements effects pH to a different degree with the 39% Magnesium in Golden Bay Dolomite lifting the pH 1.66 x more than straight Calcium found in normal ag lime.
So for every one ton of dolomite applied you lift the pH higher than the equivalent one ton of lime.
Address the main cation levels and pH will take care of itself.
A critically important element Calcium should be viewed for its effect on plant and animal nutrition along with microbial health more than adjusting pH alone.
Known as the ‘King of nutrients’ calcium is the trucker of all minerals because it is intimately involved in the movement of nutrients in and out of the cell. Calcium is also the key mineral determining cell strength as, in combination with Silica; it is built into the cell wall. Shelf life, resistance to disease and reduced insect pressure are all benefits if increased cell strength.
Dolomite is a major source of calcium, a deficiency of which causes stunted growth, restricted leaf development and paleness at leaf margins.
Adjusting the Calcium / Magnesium levels in the soil with a calculated application of Dolomite, will reduce soil acidity (lift pH) and therefore ensure better over all nutrient availability.
The presence of broadleaf weeds are an indicator that Calcium is lacking. This alone should be enough to indicate the need for Dolomite or Lime, but look for other signs. Checking the “brix” levels (sugar content) in pasture with a refractometer offers a reliable guideline to calcium levels.
If the plant contains adequate levels of calcium, the indicator line is fuzzy and indistinct, but it sharpens and becomes more defined as calcium becomes deficient. If the sap pH is low in pasture this also helps to confirm a calcium shortage.
It is obvious that if you are exporting calcium off the farm twice a day as milk (dairy farming), you need to compensate for this removal. If a penetrometer reveals a tight, closed soil with a hard pan at 20cm, this is yet another indicator of a soil screaming out for the flocculating force of calcium.
Each application of Dolomite presents magnesium to your stock through your pasture every day.
Magnesium losses on high producing dairy farms are estimated to be in the order of 20-25 kg/ha per year.
Because of Dolomites purity its magnesium content is readily available to plants, and therefore animals. Applying dolomite can reduce the need for many supplementary health remedies that are costly, time consuming and effect production. Applying magnesium and Calcium in the form of Dolomite can help reduce milk fever and grass staggers in dairy cows and improve overall stock health. Achieving adequate levels of Magnesium in stock has a calming affect on them, meaning less stress for all involved.
Magnesium is found at the centre of the chlorophyll molecule, the plants light-harvesting, energy-producing centre, and so plays an important role in energy metabolism as well as the production of oils and proteins. You will obtain these advantages as magnesium moves up to the desired 12 – 20% base saturation level.
A key fact often overlooked about Golden Bay Dolomite is the nature of the rock and its ability to crush down to a very fine particle size. Without doubt the fineness of grinding is one of the major contributing factors to the continued success of Dolomite as typically 66% of the product is ground to less than 150 microns (0.15mm) so that solubility and plant availability are optimised.
THIS SEMINAR IS NOW POSTOPONED UNTIL 2021 – DATE TO BE ADVISED
Venue:
The Function Centre
Brancott Winery
Main Road South
Blenheim
Cost:
Individual registrations $750 + gst
Couples $1,400 + gst
Single day $300 + gst
Whether your business is orchards, vineyards, cropping or pastoral farming, we invite you to take this opportunity to participate in this seminar to hear Neal Kinsey speak about the most important issue facing our industries today – soil health.
For more information please contact:
Ross Wight - This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., 027 246 2114
Ron McLean - This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., 027 289 4258 or:
Don Hart - This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., 027 432 0187
Phone: 0800 549 433
Merv Solly
03 525 9843
0274 545 930
Ron McLean
07 5433 526
027 289 4258
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Avoca Lime Company Limited
Lovell Road
Whangarei
09 433 5720
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Trevor Pearce - Top of the South / West Coast / Canterbury
03 544 5511
027 230 9934
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Ross Wright – South Island
027 246 2114
03 525 9843
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