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What is a good sustainable soil for 8 cubic feet. Filling 2 30 gallon smart pots. Im gonna have worms and compost and covercrops in my soil already.
Here's EXACTLY what you're looking forWhat is a good sustainable soil for 8 cubic feet. Filling 2 30 gallon smart pots. Im gonna have worms and compost and covercrops in my soil already.
just did 2 20 gal no tills about 4 weeks ago with this exact recipe.Here's EXACTLY what you're looking for
Base mix
1/3 peat moss
1/3 compost
1/3 pumice/lava rock
To each cubic foot add:
1/2 cup kelp meal
1/2 cup crab meal
1/2 cup neem meal
1/2 cup gypsum
1/2 cup oyster shell flower
2 cups basalt/ glacial rock dust
Let it cook for a couple of weeks and then introduce your worms
Haha the straight lazy nooby mixThis mix is an awesome and simple mix that really doesn't need to be cooked.
I got this from @Superweedman. You can do others like SUBCOOL or Green Avengers.
Grow your plants under 18hrs ON /6hrs OFF lighting for 15-40 days according to container size. Then it's flower time! Do not add liquid nutrients at any time! Use only carbohydrate and sugar additives during the flowering phase. For heavy feeding or extra large plants top dress the soil with 4-6 cups of Super Soil at day 25-30 for an additional non-burning nutrient boost.
Easy peezy Just adjust amounts to suit your grow.
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Nice!just did 2 20 gal no tills about 4 weeks ago with this exact recipe.
bout to do 2 more, plus a 30. the 2 20 gals will be my biochar challenge one with one without. gonna mix them up today hopefully!
go buy a bag of cowboy charcoal. measure out how much biochar you would like in your soil and put the charcoal in a sheet and smash it up with a hammer. take the char and add it to a 5 gal bucket, add RO or non chlorinated water and fill so the level of liquid is more than the char. add alfalfa meal, fishbone meal, kelp meal, fish hydrolysate whatever source of nitrogen you like and bubble with air stones for 2 weeks. then add EWC and BSM and make a compost tea essentially with the char in there. after 24-48 more hours your char is charged and ready to use.Nice!
I'm a little behind on the no till containers. I'm waiting for my 20 gallon worm pot to finish, I'll start them then.
I need to implement bio char but the only stuff I can find around here is insanely expensive.
go buy a bag of cowboy charcoal. measure out how much biochar you would like in your soil and put the charcoal in a sheet and smash it up with a hammer. take the char and add it to a 5 gal bucket, add RO or non chlorinated water and fill so the level of liquid is more than the char. add alfalfa meal, fishbone meal, kelp meal, fish hydrolysate whatever source of nitrogen you like and bubble with air stones for 2 weeks. then add EWC and BSM and make a compost tea essentially with the char in there. after 24-48 more hours your char is charged and ready to use.
Edit: you can also just put the biochar pieces in with your compost pile, and by the time the compost is ready the biochar should be charged.
no i'm not missing that part. i fully explained how to charge it. you didn't read my post obviously lol.I'm not a huge fan boy of bio char all that much. I feel that my lava rock has a good cec with a very suitable home for the microbes and such.
BUT
you're definitely missing out on the most important part, which is activating the charcoal itself.
By doing this you're releasing all of its carbon(1000:1)therefore you need to supplement with a shit load of nitrogen I.e. Charging it with alfalfa or nettles
Without first activating the coal you're doing more harm than good. I wouldn't use it
no i'm not missing that part. i fully explained how to charge it. you didn't read my post obviously lol.
I wasn't aware that scoria has a charge to the surface of it. is it positive or negatively charged?
this was what i followed... http://www.ithaka-journal.net/wege-zu-terra-preta-aktivierung-von-biokohle?lang=en Could you please explain why this is unorthodox? I got the method from the Dons' garden. he was bubbling his char as well. if you just point me to a link or something i'd be happy to read itI know exactly how bio char works.. You on the other hand, don't..
And no, I wasn't talking about charging the char. I'm talking about activating it, something you didn't mention at all...
Go do some more research before you go try your unorthodox method please. It's people like you who don't do enough research, fuck up something simple and then blame it all on "Organics".
..The lava rock is negatively charged just like anything else that has a good cation exchange.
This is almost exactly why I use. Myself and others have had great results with it.Here's EXACTLY what you're looking for
Base mix
1/3 peat moss
1/3 compost
1/3 pumice/lava rock
To each cubic foot add:
1/2 cup kelp meal
1/2 cup crab meal
1/2 cup neem meal
1/2 cup gypsum
1/2 cup oyster shell flower
2 cups basalt/ glacial rock dust
Let it cook for a couple of weeks and then introduce your worms
this was what i followed... http://www.ithaka-journal.net/wege-zu-terra-preta-aktivierung-von-biokohle?lang=en Could you please explain why this is unorthodox? I got the method from the Dons' garden. he was bubbling his char as well. if you just point me to a link or something i'd be happy to read it
I say one incorrect thing and "it's people like me". just say no, that is incorrect, here's a link, read it. I would be glad to do so.
What else do ya add?This is almost exactly why I use. Myself and others have had great results with it.
P-
well i couldn't find any information about your process of "activating" the char. everyone use "activate" and "charge" interchangingly. however i'm sure everyone that is making char and showing the results is doing it in the same fashion, with a sealed vessel in a fire. everything i found on biochar that was charged showed positive results over the control. i seriously doubt that my char mix is not going to do harm, but i guess we will see cause i already mixed the containers, one with char and one without. i'll be showing the growth when i get some plants in them in a month or so, fingers crossed!I don't have sources as I haven't researched bio char in a few years. And don't really give two shits about it
Basically what makes it "bio" char is the fact that you light it up, let it burn almost all the way up and suffocate it right before leaving a nice porous product.. Doing this you're releasing the carbon which in turn makes everything work. It's not going to charge if it's not activated..