^ Reading labels is always excellent advice, and this especially goes for checking out the ingredients.
here is my reply...
Molasses (sp) will help break down nutes.
Tiger bloom, nearly organic, just gets absorbed by the plants roots faster (from what i have heard via grow store), but is pretty much organic. Its a far stretch from something like snow storm by humboldt county, which is carcinogenic ( I assume, gravity was....)
Calcium nitrate, magnesium nitrate, ammonium nitrate, ammonium phosphate, potassium phosphate, potassium nitrate, earthworm castings, Norwegian kelp, iron EDTA, zinc EDTA, manganese EDTA, copper EDTA, chelating agent, disodium ethylenediamine tetra acetate (EDTA), sodium borate, and sodium molybdate.
You can't always expect to get accurate information at a grow store. TB has all of
two organic ingredients. Rest of it seems like synthetic nitrate and phosphate compounds alongside synthetically chelated micronutrients. The EDTA is the primary chelating agent there, it likes to form chemical complexes with micronutrients (heavy metals especially), and can help or force the plant to assimilate them. It lacks organic matter and doesn't support a living soil which is what you'd want in a main bloom nutrient you were using for organic growing. In other words still a far stretch from a rawer natural, lower NPK (and cheaper) liquid organic nutrient like Earth Juice... if organics is really what a person was going for.
A real organic nutrient has organic matter and brewing potential. What you also have to realize is that most fertilizers are labeled soluble N, insoluble, available phosphate (P2O5), soluble potash (K20). Setting aside the fact
that P and K are expressed as oxides they are also only telling you how much P\K is actually already available to the plant.