For the Past year I have been building up my organic compost usual stuff veg waste,brown waste and horse manure and plenty of worms it seems to be teaming with bug life which I know is a good thing I intend to use this on next grow as am tired of using chemicals would what I have put in to compost be enough to ensure a healthy crop as I have no interest in putting any Chemicals this time all help and info Is appreciated
You'll know if it has life in it or not. The smell is unmistakable, and quite intoxicating. In fact, the microbes in a living soil/compost actually provide a bit of a dopamine rush. This is why gardening is so peaceful and relaxing for everyone that gets into it.
You're on the right track from what I can tell. You're making your own EWC, and if you've been letting the worms compost everything for the last year then your EWC should be amazing.
My soil mix is a variation of Coots. I run 40% peat/40% perlite/20% compost. Sole mineral input is Basalt. Oyster Shell Flour is his pH buffer of choice, but Lime will also work of course. Coots uses Crab, Neem, and Kelp meals for dry amendments and that is all you need. I use something different, but that's because of a Calcium issue with my water so I can't use Crab Meal.
I've found that putting equal parts compost/perlite/peat gave me issues, personally. Unless your compost is of the highest quality, it will clump up on you in your pots.
I've found better results with the 40/40/20 ratio, favoring religious top dresses of compost and dry amendments every week. Neem, Crab, and Kelp are extremely light and won't cause burn, so you can top dress with the stuff constantly and see no issues.
Just be sure to replace Neem Meal with Karanja Meal in flower for your top dresses. Neem has a 6-1-2 NPK where as Karanja has zero NPK, making it more suitable for flower.
also you should add vermiculite instead of perlite.
Its a volcanic rock and its better in organic.
What do you use for drainage and aeration in your soil? Vermiculite retains moisture whereas perlite is for drainage and aeration.
You're spot on about volcanic rock being well suited for organic, but you need some form of aeration in your soil to go with the vermiculite.
Basalt is a volcanic rock, and is incredible stuff.