Update @ Conundrum #2
Improving the soil of an alfalfa patch
(
https://www.rollitup.org/t/callis-conundrums.936771/page-2#post-13434764)
SO after much conundering, the solution for the alfalfa patch was to feed it to itself
I gave up on a side by side as the bed is too small, the growth too uneven due to shading, and maybe soil conditions; the plants northwards (bottom on the pix) had more munch-marks on them, so they're weaker there.
So first, take the new, hi-N growth (as everything green sprouting in springtime is pretty hi in N
)
Make its contents readily available by increasing the surface area and extracting plant protoplasma into a fluid form too.
In short, green smoothie time
The soil got lightly loosened, as I noticed how the alfalfa where I'd taken the first sample was growing better than the others, and remembered how the ACTUAL reason I'm doing all this is to replace the toil of mechanical aeration j/k lol
So, soil loosened,
also as to allow the mycospores to get to those roots more easily.
Oh and I took a soil sample before putting anything back. Will check on it tomorrow.
Topdressing of stems that were too thick (my blender started smoking at some point, oops), along with the chopped alfalfa leaves and softer stems.
Watered in with 10L alfalfa juice first,
then 6L mycorrhizal solution,
then 20L water, as I was done hoping on that fat rain cloud that had been hanging around all day, taunting me to leave the mulch on (which I did, when you take mulch off, it sort of disappears?)
haha
I just hope the watering got the mycos down into the soil!
I'm really paranoid about them getting where they're supposed to be...
@greasemonkeymann, maybe the trichs are in the mixes specifically
to prevent germination too soon?
In
Teaming with fungi I read that there is only a limited time after germination for the fungus to reach the plant root - before it runs out of carbon reserves.
So the scenario could be like so:
In the beginning, the spore sits in the ground and can't germinate, because all those saprophytic tricos are sproutiong around it.
Then a root is nearby and secretes those messenger substances, that cause the spore to germinate (and probably change the environment to neutralize whatever the tricos are putting out too?) and which then guide it to the plant root (!! I can't get over how amazing that is).
So that could be a reason?
Then.... I sat myself on my bench and pondered on how to talk myself out of having done all this a day before full moon, especially since we'd been talking about it here
Well... possibly, with all the energy in those tips I just cut off today...
but
then gave
all of it back to them, in a readily available form...
along with organisms that will wake up the soil life and speed up and diversify the new growth.
And it being full moon, it all will get pulled back up into the plants in no time too..
haha pure confabulation here now
Cheers!