Yeah mon that should do the trick. I applied all those individually and it worked minus the crab! I had those fuckers bad. That BTI seems to be good to crumble in the soil. Thanks Rrog!!I use my mortar and pestle all the time for gardening...
last night I ground up some mosquito dunks, neem/karanja cake, and crab meal (that shit is hard to grind!!!) for topdressing. been having a few gnats lately so I figure this will wipe em all out lol...a little Bt and neem to put em in their place...the crab meal's effects will kick in eventually once the chitinase enzymes are active
foreverfly - dig around in the pot and see if there are any worms/insects. what does it smell like? what was the soil that you used last year? i'd be inclined to topdress with like 4'' of EWC/compost, plant, and then topdress some neem/crab/kelp meal. got any pics of the soil?
st0wandgrow most of us are in the same boat hence why we went to soil. Soil imo is the easiest shit (literally) you can grow in. You mix all up front and it takes like 2 hours tops or even shorter with a cement mixer. Teas are easier to make than going to the dro store for nutes and 1/10 of the cost or even more savings depending. You don't need grow stores anymore for the most part. If you don't want to play with teas you can take your amendments and tops dress your plants. If you want automation get blumats and if you want to grow good dank while having a full time job, having more time for your family, and saving lots $$$. Pull up a chair and watch for updates......Man, what a great thread! Thank you to all that are contributing!
I have done the hydro thing, and have been growing in soil for several years now using synthetics. Organics seems like the logical progression, and I'm very much open to any knowledge and ideas. Here's the deal though, I work 50+ hours a week, and I have a wife and three kids. I enjoy the shit out of working in the garden, but I also value my free time. I should mention that I would like to try and keep this as plant based as possible. I'm down with EWC, on the fence over guano, and not cool at all with bone meal, blood meal, manures, etc. I'm drawn to the convenience of the bottled organic nutrients like General Organics and Bio Canna (yes, I know you guys hate the bottles, and yes I read Matt Rizes thread ), but I also see the *truly* organic thing you guys are doing.
So can a guy in my position make a soil, amend it, brew teas (which I have never done before), etc and not be completely overwhelmed by it?
Im pretty sure the coconut water is fine,is what I picked up at sprouts and used and my soldiers look great!i pick these two up at market today. not to sure if they'll work.
http://www.amazon.com/Vita-Coco-Coconut-11-1-Ounce-Containers/dp/B000LL0R8I/ref=pd_sim_gro_4
http://www.amazon.com/ALOE-Natural-Water-Original-15-2-Ounce/dp/B007FK3HHG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1364361105&sr=8-1&keywords=aloe+gloe
Welcome to the party. Thanks for stopping to look and I hope to see this thread progress into a sticky at some pointThanks guys. ima head down to mexican market and buy some aloe leaves. as for application rates i used them @ 1tbsp each in a quart, not sure if its too much or not. anyways i sprayed one seedlings yesterday and it exploded this morning! i did a side by side test. ill have some pics up later on today.
For the new people listen to this ^2tbs per gal is a better rate to save you money...i believe that is the threshold at which applying more doesn't do much.
also potassium sorbate is bad if that's in there...definitely check it out
coconut water 1:15 dilution
These pics are crazy! Can't say I've ever seen any indoor container with compost (for lack of a better term) on top like that. I'm assuming that's what you mean by "no till"?No till update:
Lot's of new growth
I have no idea about that, I'd keep it simple personally. The point is save money and stay away from gimmicksHas anyone used microp soil builder before? I'm thinking about giving it a try. Its a micro-algae inoculant that you spray on the surface of your soil. The algae then absorbs nitrogen from the air and reruns it to the soil.