MyHighQis420
Member
Was Just Wonder'n If Its Cool To Mix All The Left Overs From Other Plants And Mix It In My Soil, leaves, stems ect... thank's oh and does music really help out ur plants, and what kinda music would plants preffer?
The color of the egg doesn't matter at all. The majority of the shell (95%) is calcium carbonate. 'Brown eggs' just happen to be pigmented by a thin layer of protoporphyrin.awesome info,, thanks again bro... oh yea one last thing... egg shells? white one or the farm brown ones? i figure the brown ones.... but thanks again homie's
Dam you sound like a reall eggspertThe color of the egg doesn't matter at all. The majority of the shell (95%) is calcium carbonate. 'Brown eggs' just happen to be pigmented by a thin layer of protoporphyrin.
And males can be composted just fine. Hopefully you caught it before the pollen sacs were fully developed and releasing pollen, in which case you especially dont have anything to worry about.
Dam you sound like a reall eggspert
So If I like dark meat should I grow dark eggs?.... or does it just apply to the feathers? Hmmm this has really got me thinking... Do I smell chicken shit?barump bump! That for sure need to be said. Eggsactly as Egghead would say. The only difference between white eggs and brown eggs is the color of the fuckin chicken that laid it.
AFAIK, this is at least partially true. Different species of microbes as well as other soil biota (not just bacteria) vary in exactly what role they play in the nutrient cycle and to what capacity. Of course, it would be ideal to let materials thoroughly decompose into sweet, rich, finished compost before incorporating into potting soil. The materials have to decompose, because the nutrients within them are locked up in forms that are not usable by plants. But, there will always be some organic matter in the soil that remains pending further decomposition, and there should always be soil biota working on such matter.I'm new to this, so I could be completely wrong. But what I think I learned in a horticulture class was that if there's anything in the soil that isn't already composted, the bacteria in the soil will start to break it down, and that process requires a lot of nitrogen from the soil, that could otherwise be usable by, and extremely necessary for, the plant.