Rrog
Well-Known Member
I look at ACT and Lacto-B (BIM) a little teeny bit differently these days.
Lacto Bacillus is a primary digester. Great for getting things going in a new soil. That's why it's great to make Bokashi. A real digester. I'm less convinced routinely applying ACT or BIMs is as good as perhaps the Barley, coconut or aloe teas. The thought is that if the soil microbes are up and running in the soil, every day that goes by that soil becomes more organized. Hierarchies are further established. Things are more organized. It hit me one day when I thought of pouring billions of microbes down upon all that order in that plant pot. If there was such a vast microbial order, am I really helping? I realize there's a huge introduction of nutrients, but we can do that with other teas and amendments.
The coconut, barley and Aloe teas (or mix all thee = 1 tea) don't supply microbes that I already have. They supply plant enzymes, hormones and various secondary metabolites (sorry to keep saying that). These are like power tools you're dropping into the soil for the microbes and plant to use. They help the microherd, but don't disturb it.
This is just a thought
Lacto Bacillus is a primary digester. Great for getting things going in a new soil. That's why it's great to make Bokashi. A real digester. I'm less convinced routinely applying ACT or BIMs is as good as perhaps the Barley, coconut or aloe teas. The thought is that if the soil microbes are up and running in the soil, every day that goes by that soil becomes more organized. Hierarchies are further established. Things are more organized. It hit me one day when I thought of pouring billions of microbes down upon all that order in that plant pot. If there was such a vast microbial order, am I really helping? I realize there's a huge introduction of nutrients, but we can do that with other teas and amendments.
The coconut, barley and Aloe teas (or mix all thee = 1 tea) don't supply microbes that I already have. They supply plant enzymes, hormones and various secondary metabolites (sorry to keep saying that). These are like power tools you're dropping into the soil for the microbes and plant to use. They help the microherd, but don't disturb it.
This is just a thought