Breeding Beneficial Bacteria and Microbes

specialkayme

Well-Known Member
In looking and searching the multitude of beneficial bacterial, fungi, and microbes available (Mayan Microzyme, Myco Madness, Voodoo Juice, Piranha, and Tarantula, to name a few) and after being amazed at the enormous prices, I was wondering if it would be possible to actually breed your own bacteria?

I'm not actually talking about creating your own bacteria, more like buying one package of Piranha, then introducing it into an environment that allows it to thrive, and multiply. This way you could take half of the 'offspring' and use it on your plants, leaving the other half there to reproduce again. Any thoughts on if this is possible? And if so, how would one be able to do it?
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
Dr. Earth and Happy Frog are two dry fert sources of many beneficial microbes, and I think they're fairly priced (relatively, organic does seem to be more expensive at this point). But, if you like, it can be done. Search organics for Ohsogreen's posts, I'm sure he's spoken about culturing microbes before in teas.
 

1kooguy

New Member
Keep it simple MG potting mix,bag of gardenlime,bag of perlite,some superthrive,and some miraclegrow liquid houseplant food.Then when its time to "BUD" ,bat turd and kelp.
 

GoodFriend

Lumberjack
you can bubble a big tea of them organic goodies, but tbh i don't know exactly how long you could stretch it for (i generally had some bubbling for a few days before using it all...)

i've always used soil secrets earth nectar and earth ambrosia

very fairly priced, and def has a lot of microb action going on

if i was still doing soil grows i'd def use it again!
 

GoodFriend

Lumberjack
Keep it simple MG potting mix,bag of gardenlime,bag of perlite,some superthrive,and some miraclegrow liquid houseplant food.Then when its time to "BUD" ,bat turd and kelp.

... :confused:
thats simple?

simple is 100% perlite w/ gh 3 part micro and bloom. 2 teaspoons of micro: 1 teaspoon of bloom per gallon of water for veg

reverse the ratio for flower


as simple as it gets!
 

specialkayme

Well-Known Member
Yeah, I'd have to say that Hempy buckets with the Lucas formula is just about as simple as it gets.

I prefer coco as my medium. If I was growing in soil I really wouldn't be too concerned about adding bacteria. And I've actually never used them in any of my grows, but mainly only because of the price. I havn't seen earth nectar or earth ambrosia before though ....

I'll look into Ohsogreen's posts and come back with what I have found out, if anyone else is interested.
 

Jonus

Well-Known Member
"and after being amazed at the enormous prices"

What was the price of the AN product/s that gives you the bacterial, fungi, and microbes...
 

GoodFriend

Lumberjack
that's what i love about the EA/EN stuff...

10-20 bucks for bottles of the both of them to last ya a while...
check it out on ebay, best prices there straight from maker!
 

specialkayme

Well-Known Member
I think Voodoo Juice was going for about $80 a liter, Piranha and Tarantula were both around $45 or $50 for 130 g, Mayan Microzyme was $35 for 8 oz, and Myco Madness was about $50. I don't remember how much was in it though. Why do you ask Jonus?

I did a search for Ohsogreen's posts in the organic section, and got about 144 different threads all about shit! Literally, cow shit, bunny shit, bat shit, you name it. Haha, I just wasn't really expecting so many posts about shit. Anyway, I've walked through about 10 threads of his so far, and can't find anything about bacteria cultures. Can anyone point me in the right direction? I'm trying, just can't find what I'm looking for.

And yes Lumberjack, I'll look into the EA/EN stuff. Sounds good and cheap, but how does it compare to the AN products? They are crazy over priced, but have way more microbes, fungi, and bacteria than any other brand I have seen, which is why I would really like to be able to buy just a little bit and breed my own, if at all possible. That way you can just buy one 50 g package and never have to buy any more ever again, ideally at least.

I'm also looking into Super Plant Tonic stuff that Ohsogreen is bragging about. Every try it Lumberjack? I wonder how it adds up. It's super cheap, but usually the cheaper the product the lower the quality ... although certainly not always.
 

Jonus

Well-Known Member
The only thing I can add if you intend to make up your own micronutes or active fungi....is to test it out first on some plants outside to get the dilution right. I've stood in a few grow stores listening to horror stories of dying plants and the problem ended up being them feeding their plants some home brewed mix that was fantastic in every way except for the fact they should have diluted it 1 ml per litre rather than pouring it straight on.
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
I've been using Super Plant Tonic, a live wet culture/brew of microbes. It's very good stuff. I keep it going and extend its life by adding back a wee bit of water and keeping the lid loosely capped.

To brew a live tea here's what I do:
Filtered water
2T molasses/gal
1/4C worm castings/gal
Inoculation of myco's (I'll use 1-2T SPT or something like Dr. Earth, NEVER Happy Frog again because it uses bone meal, and bone meal tea smells like gack.)

I don't have an air pump, so I don't aerate it, I mix it vigorously for a few minutes each day, and it works very well. This I'll either water in directly, or mix down. As I use some up, I add some back to keep it going. As long as I keep using molasses in it, it smells a bit like beer. I've kept my teas going for weeks this way, drawing off and adding back at the above ratios. I'm probably nowhere nearly as good as Ohso, but I'm workin' on it!
 

wyteboi

Well-Known Member
I know this thread is old but, I am going to update it as soon I can. This is a very good question for folks trying to do organics the right way. Organics is not about marketing hype and 20 bottles of food you can brew/make yourself, for a very small fraction of the cost of the big name bottles and when you do it yourself the ingredients are fresher. (which is always better with true organics)
I am going to use a microscope and put some of these beneficial bacteria's to the test against casting and compost teas.
Of course my test will not be 100% accurate because as of now i do not know which species are which (by looks) but i should be able to see which ones have more activity then others........
 

Wetdog

Well-Known Member
I am going to use a microscope and put some of these beneficial bacteria's to the test against casting and compost teas.
Of course my test will not be 100% accurate because as of now i do not know which species are which (by looks) but i should be able to see which ones have more activity then others........
LOL, save the looking.:peace:

If you use worm castings, especially fresh castings, there are tons of beneficial bacteria already in it. Add 1tbl of molasses/gallon of tea while bubbling it, and it will wake them right up.:mrgreen::mrgreen:

I also make my own bokashi bran, some for my own form of bokashi, but the majority is used for worm food.

EM-1 concentrate (Efficient Micro Organisms) ~$20/qt shipped. The real beauty of it is, after MUCH digging, I found that you can make 1qt of 'activated' EM using 1oz of the concentrate. So you get 8 gallons from the quart.

All you need to make 10 lbs of the bokashi bran is 1 oz of the 'activated' EM, not the concentrate, so 1qt of the concentrate will literally make tons of the stuff.

Bokashi bran is just inoculated wheat bran which I get locally for $12.50/50lb bag. Cost like ~$17 for a 2lb bag online.:roll:

It's also used as animal feed, but I just can't seem to get my cats to eat it.:confused: The worms seem to love it though.

It's a start.

Wet
 

wyteboi

Well-Known Member
LOL, save the looking.:peace:

If you use worm castings, especially fresh castings, there are tons of beneficial bacteria already in it. Add 1tbl of molasses/gallon of tea while bubbling it, and it will wake them right up.:mrgreen::mrgreen:

I also make my own bokashi bran, some for my own form of bokashi, but the majority is used for worm food.

EM-1 concentrate (Efficient Micro Organisms) ~$20/qt shipped. The real beauty of it is, after MUCH digging, I found that you can make 1qt of 'activated' EM using 1oz of the concentrate. So you get 8 gallons from the quart.

All you need to make 10 lbs of the bokashi bran is 1 oz of the 'activated' EM, not the concentrate, so 1qt of the concentrate will literally make tons of the stuff.

Bokashi bran is just inoculated wheat bran which I get locally for $12.50/50lb bag. Cost like ~$17 for a 2lb bag online.:roll:

It's also used as animal feed, but I just can't seem to get my cats to eat it.:confused: The worms seem to love it though.

It's a start.

Wet
Thats another nice fuckin post wet !
Now i am gonna be in the books for hours reading on bokashi bran. (no big deal i just get intensive when i wanna know something.)
 

indoorman

Member
Quantum Growth the best beneficial microbes you can use. I bought through a manufactures rep. douglas speed.com and now I just use hid Hut and add it to my order. Screw making a bunch of powder spore formers when you can get liquid living stable microbes with no hassle. this is a consortisum of 19 strains all beneficial to the plant and their not spore forming. Spore forming miccrobes go dormant in stress conditions. Quantum microbes are living in the bottle they working 24/7 as soon as you add them. Happy growing, means happy banking. Indoorman
 

xivex

Active Member
Plant success granular myco spores with beneficals and vitamins and low nute levels is pretty nice. Plant sccess is the maker of great white, but you can buy their granular for like $17. Used it every 2 weeks this cycle. Great stuff.
 

Wetdog

Well-Known Member
You could also check out www.fungi.com

MycoGrow Soluble is ~$8 for 1oz delivered and will make 12 gallons of solution. The beauty of it is, only ONE application is needed.

Wet
 
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