I still don't understand all this PH talk when it comes to organic growing... mind boggling on every level.
Dank, unless you have a microscope and know how to identify bacteria/archaea/protozoa/nematodes, stick to the basics. QUALITY (can't emphasize this enough!) compost/vermicompost and molasses, that's it. No kelp, no earth juice, no nectar, forget it. Studies have actually shown that kelp delays the division of bacteria during the brew cycle. Brew a separate kelp meal tea, your girls will love you for it.
Remember the primary reason for an ACT is to populate the soil with microbial life, it is not a nutritional tea and it is not to feed the plant. Mix in or topdress the kelp/fish (or whatever else people put into their teas) into the soil. The critters from the tea will cycle that shit, and it is their shit that the roots crave (the shit of the protozoa and nematodes in ionic form). Boy, that's a shit ton of shit
. Sure, many people blindly add this and that to their tea with no negative effects, however they do not receive the full benefit of an ACT either. Once again, your tea will only be as good as your compost/EWC, so quality is a must here, ie not the stuff at the hydro store.