Just an interesting observation I thought I would share...
I'm currently in veg of my second grow using the soil in these bins (its been recycled and my last run was the first with this soil). All bins contain the same mix of local high quality potting mix with some additional perlite. During my last grow I supplemented the soil a few times with organic dry amendments.
My last run consisted of one bin of autos and 4 bins of photos. I flipped the switch on the photos when the autos were harvested and dragged the auto bin out of the tent and let it sit in my mudroom for 3 months when the photos flowered and dried. As soon as the photos were dry and the tent was empty, I amended the soil with some organic 4-4-4 and planted the population pictured below.
Clearly, one of these bins is not like the others...and it happens to be the case that the bin that is RIPPING is the bin that was left to rest for 3 months. Seems to me that during this "resting" phase, the microbes were not resting at all, but hard at work breaking down the dry amendments that I added throughout the previous run.
The way I'm looking at this is: while amending the soil throughout the auto run, I was essentially mixing up a super soil and yeah, the plants may have benefited a little at the time, but the resting phase is equivalent to the "cooking" phase that one would include during the creation of a super soil.
Any thoughts or different points of view out there?
I'm currently in veg of my second grow using the soil in these bins (its been recycled and my last run was the first with this soil). All bins contain the same mix of local high quality potting mix with some additional perlite. During my last grow I supplemented the soil a few times with organic dry amendments.
My last run consisted of one bin of autos and 4 bins of photos. I flipped the switch on the photos when the autos were harvested and dragged the auto bin out of the tent and let it sit in my mudroom for 3 months when the photos flowered and dried. As soon as the photos were dry and the tent was empty, I amended the soil with some organic 4-4-4 and planted the population pictured below.
Clearly, one of these bins is not like the others...and it happens to be the case that the bin that is RIPPING is the bin that was left to rest for 3 months. Seems to me that during this "resting" phase, the microbes were not resting at all, but hard at work breaking down the dry amendments that I added throughout the previous run.
The way I'm looking at this is: while amending the soil throughout the auto run, I was essentially mixing up a super soil and yeah, the plants may have benefited a little at the time, but the resting phase is equivalent to the "cooking" phase that one would include during the creation of a super soil.
Any thoughts or different points of view out there?
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