Garden Myth Legend: Eggshells = Instant Calcium Boost

The Myth:
“Toss crushed eggshells into your garden and you’ll instantly add calcium to your soil—preventing blossom end rot and boosting plant health.”

The Truth (a.k.a. Why this is Misinformation):

Eggshells do contain calcium… but in a form plants can’t use anytime soon. They’re mostly calcium carbonate—the same stuff as limestone rock. And just like rock, they break down extremely slowly.
In real garden conditions, eggshells can take many months to years to release meaningful calcium—far too slow to fix deficiencies in the current growing season.

Egg Shell Myth Egg Shell Myth

Even worse, blossom end rot isn’t usually caused by a lack of calcium in the soil. Most soils contain plenty. Typically, blossom end rot is caused by watering inconsistencies that prevent the plant from moving calcium where it’s needed.

Bottom line:
Sprinkling eggshells in your garden might make you feel productive… but it won’t solve calcium issues when your plants actually need it.

Egg Shell Myth

What actually works:

  • Consistent watering
  • Healthy soil structure
  • If needed, based on a soil test, fast-acting calcium sources (like gypsum, calcium nitrate, or liquid calcium) will quickly correct a deficiency. Most commercial tomato fertilizers will have added immediately available calcium. An absolute necessity in commercial potting mixes used when growing in containers.

Garden Wise Take:
Eggshells aren’t harmful—but they’re not a solution. They’re a slow compost ingredient, not a quick fix