haha yes! I've been slacking on posting. I'm in the middle of a huge transition. Hopefully all dies down soon.
Your input is appreciated my friend. So if the warmer it is (withiin reason) and the longer it brews - why is a long brew (over a few days) bad?
Again not an expert and alot of this is just me regurgitating other very smart people whom I trust to know these things.
The warmer the water the faster the metabolic process of the microbs takes place.
There is a cycle of life that happens in these teas.
First the Bacteria start to multiply in huge numbers, this starts right away (with carb source). Depending on temps you'll get a max bac count somewhere between 12 and 24 hours into the brew.
After the bacteria get going next up is the fungi, fungi dont reproduce very fast so its not the numbers that start to increase but the actual size of the fungal strands as they start to chomp on the bacteria and carbs themselves.
Next up is the protozoa - these are more complext lifeforms then the fungi and the bac, they start to increase in numbers as they eat down on their bacterial food supply, at this point the bacterial count starts to decline quickly because they are being eaten up.
Then things go south - anerobic bacteria start to take over, even if the air supply is good in the tea you can only keep them at bay for so long. They produce alot of nasty stuff which start to sour the tea and make things go sour. At this point all other lifeforms start to disapear.
So they key is getting the tea used before the anerobic bacteria show up and start screwing the tea up. I try to aim for a fungal teas just because even if I miss on the timeframe I still get lots good useful microbes into the dirt.