@homebrewer
Bro, first,you can take your condescension and assumptions and pack your bong with it. Now growing weed is new to me so there I turn to those with knowledge to share and books by the same. You might want open one yourself...
H/t. Bugeye
From p. 151 of Jeff
Lowenfels "Teaming with Microbes - A Guide to the Soil Food Web"
"Rule #14 warns that if you want to work with the soil food web, you need to stay away from additives that have high NPK numbers. Most gardeners know these letters represent the the percentage of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium in the fertilizer, and this NPK trilogy appears on all fertilizer packaging. Don't put anything on the lawn with NPK numbers greater than 10-10-10; traditional organic fertilizers usually meet this criterium. Of particular note is that a high (anything over 10)
concentration of phosphorus not only prevents mycorrhizal fungi from growing but kills off the ones that are there. As a result, the grass loses its ability to take up a resource easily, and no matter how much phosphorus you put on the lawn, it is locked up quickly and unavailable to the mycorrhizae-less grass plants."
So yeah, sorry for adding my little tidbit to the discussion, hate to clutter things up with hyperbole.