I cut plenty of corners, I do get lost in the details frequently tho.
Maria Thun's calendar is as I understand based on european timing, I loosely use one provided by bach biodynamics
http://www.bachbiodynamics.com/uploads/1/6/3/6/16367710/2017_planting_calendar.pdf
This calendar has some summary info about the planting research he is doing, but unfortunately what was envisioned as a collaborative effort has not yet taken off as such for him.
Interesting!
I don't have the focus to read his explanation, but from a quick scan and the calendar itself - it's a very different approach from Paungger!
In her calendars, the moon phases and ascension patterns are connected with the daily qualities (root-earth, leaf-water, flower-air, fruit-fire) and the sidereal sign. So there ends up being pretty much only one window in springtime where if you turn your soil then, followed by another day with another quality, you won't have weeds there. haha
Or, don't cut your hair on fish days, you'll get dandruff
Leo's the day to go for - and when the book came out, all hairdressers were overbooked onthose days lol
It was a fad, but underneath there are principles to respect.
The very simple principle of the flow of energy in a plant (and indeed, all living beings) through the lunar cycle.
Ever notice plant growth explosion right after new moon?
It's the life energy being pulled upwards by the tides.
I went on vacation in Kenya once, it was spectacular how the tide heights varied with the phase of the moon -- on the days around full moon high tide was around 3m!! whilst around new moon there was hardly a difference to lowtide. How amazing, to see the influence of the moon so distinctly!
So imagine, in spring, the trees, those buds, just about ready to burst into life.
And then comes the errant arborist, and cuts back that tree just then, around full moon.
Where are the life juices now??? Must one wonder that the tree grows sickly?
(Thankfully, the local arborists have changed that, and I hear most chainsaws around new moon nowadays.
But sheeez! I used to stop to yell at them for their idiocy
lol)
And from that very simple basic rhythm, we can become more specific. The day to plant lettuce is not the same as the day to plant potatoes.
But this all should be mediated by the actual conditions in the garden, else it quickly becomes quite absurd. If it's snowing but it's the perfect day to plant radishes? I think not haha
So I'll take a stab at this one:
Ah thanks!
Hmmmm... so if I followed you correctly, to verify any connection, I should have documented in which years it was "worse" - because there
are years that are worse, I can remember that much
Ohwell, we have to leave some mystery to life don't we
I like the" what does that even mean?" certainly is not a tea I'd be drinking. I guess it is vermicompost extract. This action is what I believe what caused the demise of my worm bin so I will share, if you can withhold your laughter I would much appreciate it. 6 gallon bucket worm bin holes in bottom sitting in a 5 gallon bucket so liquid can drain. All was going well, a few soil mites? (garden store employee called them mealy bugs, tiny white guys that live in a droplets of water). Poured 1 gallon of EME (EM-1 brewed with molasses), AND another gallon of water. What you see in the pic is 3/4 gallon of the roughly 1.5 gallons that drained through. All the worms that were left in the bin were balled up on top the next day and I realized the error of my ways. I feel a little bad that I willingly sacrificed the worms but I wanted to see if I could save any of them without starting a new bin. Not likely as I think the population is down to single digits now, the bugs took over so I've just been letting them be.
With regard to freshness my original plan was not to keep the extract more than 30 days, smell is still earthy 45 days on, mixed 1/4 to 1/2 cup per gallon, I have not seen any adverse affects but then what do I know? Is 30 days too long to keep? Can it be refrigerated?
Oh tis not a laughing matter at all! Tis a sad example of the misinformation out there, where yes, runoff is forced by watering the bin, and yes, it's a sort of extract, but a good vc extract is made from
finished vermicompost (and water only, incidentally), i.e., where the biology has settled and the facultatives and anaerobes (like that ciliate I found in the fall-through vc the other day) have receded.
Think of the layers your fluid washes through as it seeps down into your runoff tray!
Some bedding, some freshly decomposing stuff that may even be hot a bit, some slurry stuff in a pocket somewhere that is yet to be processed, and then through to more processed material. So along with the desired microfauna, we are also getting a set of those that we wanted to leave in our bin - because they're great there, but not so great at all in our plants' rhizospheres
And then, keeping them statically in bottles... I get stressed out when it takes half an hour to get my compost tea out onto my plants.
And that may sound (and even be, haha) hysterical! But James Sotilo, a prominent New Yorkian landscaper (
http://www.elmscapes.com/index.html), who not only planned but maintains lots of public spaces in the city, has this compost tea tank on a trailer he takes everywhere, and bubbles the tea
all the time until he goes to apply it to the trees or lawns or whatnot.
My personal 2cents, what
I'd do if I had it in my hands this moment and had to decide? If I had a really bad part of the garden, I'd go pour all of it, probably diluted, out there, and good riddance. lol
What happened in your bin was the EM, if I conunder correctly
EM as far as I get them are mainly facultative microbes, i.e. they can flourish in aerobic as well as anaerobic conditions.
By adding great amounts of moisture to the bin, there was surely a moment where it was anaerobic enough for the EM to take off whilst the pure aerobes were struggling for sheer survival. And worms can't live in anaerobic conditions.
But if you have survivors, they can be rehabbed
Actually that was my first wormbin: an acquaintance had gotten hers all anaerobic by adding waaay too much hi-N and nooo bedding to counterbalance it, and then topped it off with soybean meal (in an attempt to "dry" the bin out a bit haha).
Soybean meal is hi-N too
So I got this totally putrid bin to fix and ended up taking most of the old stuff out.
Had about 30 worms left total, but in the new bedding, and with a more healthy nutrition, they recovered and had almost become a real herd again by springtime.
From what I've learned in the past few months, today I'd be tempted to mix the old stuff with good carbon-rich material, let it settle (heat? smell?), and then feed it back to them in small portions.
So there's still hope for your guys too, hey, they survived, right?! they should get a second chance
re dog manure:
lol yeah, in compost toilet environments the recommendation is also: just for perennials, mostly non-edible perennials at that too.
But that's because in the compost toilet system yes, we have an adequate c:N ration if it's managed properly, BUT it doesn't get hot composted.
So pathogens can still be in there and all that.
But with a proper thermal composting, anything that was iffey in there is neutralized, so theoretically it should be good to go onto the veggies too
haha
(I'll let you decide if that is a compliment or insult.)
LOL will I learn from my errant ways and
not open this box?
Cheers!