needthacheeba
Well-Known Member
Im wondering if I can use things around the garden or house that can be used to lower and/or raise the PH of water?
keep in mind that a good soil base usually doesn't mind a LARGE variance of ph tolerance from water.Im wondering if I can use things around the garden or house that can be used to lower and/or raise the PH of water?
Why are you hesitant to use the dolomite lime? Stuff is great, makes PH a non-factor pretty much.greasemonkeymann do you have a complete list of what you put into your compost pile from A to Z so that I could just mimic you down to the last ingredient? I would gladly buy a book from you sir. I like experimenting with 1 or 2 plants but when I am playing fast and free with 30 plants I get a little worried. So I'm setting pH with 1/4 tsp per gallon Epsom Salt and a Citric Acid Powder but it's a pain in the butt. Also Citric Acid Powder isn't too stable I have to do this right before watering.
I have done a lot of research and I don't think I want to use this bag of Dolomite AG 10 that I purchased, I instead am using 1 cup Oyster Shell Flour per cubic foot of compost pile. I pretty much just follow what you say on your compost pile thread but I don't remember you giving real amounts just mostly eye balling it. I would really love to drop all the weights/measurements and pH drama in favor of what seems to be about right. Anyway you've helped me a lot in my journey I certainly can get through this part on my own. But if you have time to talk a little on this subject, or possibly link me to a place you've already spoke on these topics, I would love to soak that knowledge up.
By the way I'm not layering my soil anymore but before very recently I was doing layers. I think part of my concerns regarding signs of pH stress were actually the layering and I may be over solving a nonproblem here.
The problem with Dolomite lime is that it carries in a lot of Mag to the party!Why are you hesitant to use the dolomite lime? Stuff is great, makes PH a non-factor pretty much.
sorry I didn't see your questiongreasemonkeymann do you have a complete list of what you put into your compost pile from A to Z so that I could just mimic you down to the last ingredient? I would gladly buy a book from you sir. I like experimenting with 1 or 2 plants but when I am playing fast and free with 30 plants I get a little worried. So I'm setting pH with 1/4 tsp per gallon Epsom Salt and a Citric Acid Powder but it's a pain in the butt. Also Citric Acid Powder isn't too stable I have to do this right before watering.
I have done a lot of research and I don't think I want to use this bag of Dolomite AG 10 that I purchased, I instead am using 1 cup Oyster Shell Flour per cubic foot of compost pile. I pretty much just follow what you say on your compost pile thread but I don't remember you giving real amounts just mostly eye balling it. I would really love to drop all the weights/measurements and pH drama in favor of what seems to be about right. Anyway you've helped me a lot in my journey I certainly can get through this part on my own. But if you have time to talk a little on this subject, or possibly link me to a place you've already spoke on these topics, I would love to soak that knowledge up.
By the way I'm not layering my soil anymore but before very recently I was doing layers. I think part of my concerns regarding signs of pH stress were actually the layering and I may be over solving a nonproblem here.
and you are correct, I eyeballed it for sure, the challenge is it's virtually impossible to see how much leaves and grass is going to make after it composts, it melts and degrades so much that I usually make a "soil mix" for 2 cubic feet when I make the compost. Tends to work out just fine.I just like the idea of a small amount of wood ashes + oyster shell flour better for buffering acidic compost. I don't really have a no no statement to make about dolomite but when researching materials I liked this solution better. Partly I grow OG dominantly and my strains like Calcium so I really want a well mixed quantity of Ca and the P/K from wood ashes also interests me a lot more than CaMg, which I am not opposed to adding later as needed.
edit:
By the way I did a search of greasemonkeymann posts and I have all the answers I need on pH and also ingredients I need. Glad I did a search because I was shopping for manures but I think I will pass now on adding manure to my compost after reading some of gmm's posts. I used Google to narrow down what I was looking for try this for pH to read lots...
site:rollitup.org greasemonkeymann "liming agent"
Here's the meals research google
site:rollitup.org greasemonkeymann meal
(and so on)