kushking42
Well-Known Member
that looks a lot cleaner ill have to make a couple of those. good idea!Thanks kushking, I went out and built me a bag suspender good idea.
that looks a lot cleaner ill have to make a couple of those. good idea!Thanks kushking, I went out and built me a bag suspender good idea.
Did you have to drill holes in the side of your bucket to attach those wires dirtsrufr?Let me know if you need a closer shot of it, I used wire fencing was easy.
Thanks man. I am new to organics. I was a hydro grower for some time. It is kind of exiting to be learning something new again.Medical Guy- Mycorrhizae fungi do not multiply in an ACT. You would be better off adding the Myco Grow to the root zone when you transplant.
As for your teas, I'm sure they will be fine. IMO, you have it backwards though. You would be better off adding the compost (and molasses) first and bubbling for 24 hours, and then adding the rest of your ingredients and bubbling for an additional 12'ish hours. You will get a good jump on microbial multiplication with the compost and molasses before adding other ingredients because the optimal time for an ACT is 36 hours, and some of the food stocks you are adding may suppress this. Check out this website for some good info.....
http://microbeorganics.com/
I see someones been reading The Revs recipes for tea, I use the same mix aswell n it works wonders for me!What do you guys think about Myco Gro? http://www.fungi.com/product-detail/product/mycogrow-soluble-1-lb.html?
I was thinking about innoculating my AACT, (compost tea) with a pinch of this. Think that is too much?
My recipe for flowering tea is:
1tablespoon all natural molasses
20 drops CaMg+ By general organiocs, or cmparable liquid mineral supplement
1 tabespoon dry, all organic, all purpose fertilizer (with N-P-K ratios close to 5-5-5
1 tablespoon kelp meal
1teaspoon dry high nitrogen bat/bird guano (with npk ratios close to 12-8-2)
1teaspoon dry high phosphorous bat/bird guano (with npk ratios close to 0-5-0 or 1-10-0)
1teaspoon liquid fish fertilizer (with N-P-K ratios close to5-1-1 or 3-3-0.3
1/4 cup Big Bloom by fox farm
BUBBLE THIS FOR 24 HOURS THAN ADD
1/2 to 1 cup fresh compost or earthworm castings
BUBBLE FOR AN ADDITIONAL 24 HOURS
and my veg tea is:
1tablespoon all natural molasses
1tablespoon kelp meal
1tablespoon alfalfa meal
1tablespoon dry all purpose fertilizer
2teaspoons liquid fish fertilizer
2teaspoons dry-high n bird or bat guano
1teaspoon dry soluble kelp or seaweed
BUBBLE FOR 24 HOURS THEN ADD
1cup of fresh earthworm castings or fresh healthy compost
1/4 cup composted steer( or composted barnyard)manure
BUBBLE FOR AN ADDITIONAL 24HOURS
any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
You can brew fungi dominate brew. The best way you can do this is to start with a small shovel of soil from a nearby forest or acquire fungi dominant compost.What do you guys think about Myco Gro? http://www.fungi.com/product-detail/product/mycogrow-soluble-1-lb.html?
I was thinking about innoculating my AACT, (compost tea) with a pinch of this. Think that is too much?
My recipe for flowering tea is:
1tablespoon all natural molasses
20 drops CaMg+ By general organiocs, or cmparable liquid mineral supplement
1 tabespoon dry, all organic, all purpose fertilizer (with N-P-K ratios close to 5-5-5
1 tablespoon kelp meal
1teaspoon dry high nitrogen bat/bird guano (with npk ratios close to 12-8-2)
1teaspoon dry high phosphorous bat/bird guano (with npk ratios close to 0-5-0 or 1-10-0)
1teaspoon liquid fish fertilizer (with N-P-K ratios close to5-1-1 or 3-3-0.3
1/4 cup Big Bloom by fox farm
BUBBLE THIS FOR 24 HOURS THAN ADD
1/2 to 1 cup fresh compost or earthworm castings
BUBBLE FOR AN ADDITIONAL 24 HOURS
and my veg tea is:
1tablespoon all natural molasses
1tablespoon kelp meal
1tablespoon alfalfa meal
1tablespoon dry all purpose fertilizer
2teaspoons liquid fish fertilizer
2teaspoons dry-high n bird or bat guano
1teaspoon dry soluble kelp or seaweed
BUBBLE FOR 24 HOURS THEN ADD
1cup of fresh earthworm castings or fresh healthy compost
1/4 cup composted steer( or composted barnyard)manure
BUBBLE FOR AN ADDITIONAL 24HOURS
any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Very cool got a link? I bet it is just ascorbic acid with a filter on it . They use it to remove chlorine/chloramine from showers.
Hey if I am making teas, which looks like I need and want to do for I am tired of buying organic tea in a bottle and cal/mg, kelp, fish and other similar bottled organic nutrients.
I really want to get away from buying anything I need to feed my plants that is marketed in a plastic bottle for me to overpay for! PERIOD!
So anywise I came across this and was thinking.... YEAH BABY YEAH had me a ORGANICISM vision of a tremendous bloom of beneficial microbes nestling comfortably in my soil web...
DankSwag
Grow On My Friends Grow On
This is how I used to cultivate and brew, but to my understanding hyphae don't like being broke up and ran through the ringer. Would it just be better to transplant with the fungi cake, rather than brewing it?I look for twigs/bark/etc in my compost that are covered in mycelium when I am brewing a fungal dominant tea.
Then I blend my organic gluten free oats in a blender with some aloe and un chlorinated water, and moisten my mycelium laden compost with the fungal food (oats and aloe). This gets set somewhere warm (75-82) and dark for 3-5 days in a bucket with a loose lid.
Once it is covered in new mycelium, I throw it in a paint strainer and brew it along with a little kelp. This happens in a counterclockwise vortex brewer for about 18 hours.
Most definitely. "No till" is the way to go, but sometimes there's no getting around having to pick up a shovel and move some dirt. When this happens it just makes sense to me to do everything I can to repair the microbe colony. In this method a new raised bed/smart pot/etc gets set up in your ideal environment and given a series of teas. Get that colony boomin' well before Miss Marry steps foot into this new home. First I do a nematode/protozoa tea, then a fungal, and finally a bacterial. Meanwhile clones in a different location have been getting seed enzyme teas, coconut water, aloe, kelp, alfalfa, neem, aact, etc.This is how I used to cultivate and brew, but to my understanding hyphae don't like being broke up and ran through the ringer. Would it just be better to transplant with the fungi cake, rather than brewing it?
Love it Nematode tea sounds interesting. Do you just use native land? This is why I'll be making the switch to living mulch. I'm also starting to read more about AACTs that have a higher F:B ratio. IMO seems like living mulch is the easiest, cheapest, and most effective way when your Mary is big enough. I think a balanced tea is fine for a seedling and clone as they takes what they wants.Most definitely. "No till" is the way to go, but sometimes there's no getting around having to pick up a shovel and move some dirt. When this happens it just makes sense to me to do everything I can to repair the microbe colony. In this method a new raised bed/smart pot/etc gets set up in your ideal environment and given a series of teas. Get that colony boomin' well before Miss Marry steps foot into this new home. First I do a nematode/protozoa tea, then a fungal, and finally a bacterial. Meanwhile clones in a different location have been getting seed enzyme teas, coconut water, aloe, kelp, alfalfa, neem, aact, etc.
I tried talking to my plants for years. They never really heard a word I said. Marry just didn't follow orders quite perfectly enough for my standards.
Me and them microbes started hangin' out, and we got to bull shittin'... You'll never guess...
MJ is an eavesdroppin' ass bitch. She took what me and microbes were talking about and fucking ran with that shit.
MJ still doesn't take orders from me. I take orders from her.
Now I boss the microbes around. They know how to follow some god damn instructions I'll tell ya what.