oldsilvertip55
Well-Known Member
great added to cannabis!What's the deal with nettles? We have a shit ton on our property.
great added to cannabis!What's the deal with nettles? We have a shit ton on our property.
fields of hemp would help replace a lot of timber and keep it from being cut till its prime.If we all went to what's left of our forests and took dirt we'd fuck the forests up worse than we already have. I have a soft spot for this shit. I grew up in a heavily wooded forest area in the PNW, and now most of the forests and shit are parking lots, houses, and roads. The remaining little pieces of woods around where I grew up are fucked up and polluted now.
At least we still have some Federal Forests, but those are being neglected now too. I'm not a tree hugger, but I hate seeing the forests get destroyed.
Phosphorous i wanna say with nettle and . . . . . cal/mag? Horse tails will give ya silica in a tea. Did one up of that and next year I'm thinking I'll try and make a storable natural silica FPJ. Have a massive nettle that will probably come back next year, too. This year I used the flowers and they bloomed in my bokashi and in like this "what can I find in the weeds out back" picking wild prairie plants and shit.great added to cannabis!
Why? What's the specific benefit? I'm not trying to challenge just genuinely curious.great added to cannabis!
I'd see nematodes sometimes after brewing. They seemed to like a softer more mild bubble, and around 24-30 hours. That was just with Wiggle Worm and molasses. But I would put EJ in too usually. I'm actually really impressed with the life that was in the Wiggle Worm brand. Just using that took care of gnats for 3 years until I added some different compost and let the soil sit too long without keeping it really active. But Microbe-Lift BMC takes care of them easily.Water, compost or ewc, molasses. That's it. Less is more with a compost tea imo.
More importantly than adding a bunch of (possibly useless) product is the aeration time, and without a microscope we're kinda all guessing. 36-42 hours of bubbling followed by immediate use was always my go to.
People need to be reminded to use Microbe-Lift BMC on their houseplants too. The moment your tent is clear those Lil f&%#$^ are regrouping for a counterattack on your kitchen window houseplant. Fungus gnats travel well lolI'd see nematodes sometimes after brewing. They seemed to like a softer more mild bubble, and around 24-30 hours. That was just with Wiggle Worm and molasses. But I would put EJ in too usually. I'm actually really impressed with the life that was in the Wiggle Worm brand. Just using that took care of gnats for 3 years until I added some different compost and let the soil sit too long without keeping it really active. But Microbe-Lift BMC takes care of them easily.
I took out the filters in my pumps so when I do it it's a tea and topdress at the same time.
Hell I leave yellow sticky traps in my house plants, too. Need to know who's comin into my castle.People need to be reminded to use Microbe-Lift BMC on their houseplants too. The moment your tent is clear those Lil f&%#$^ are regrouping for a counterattack on your kitchen window houseplant. Fungus gnats travel well lol
Too many benefits to even list about nettles. Amazing plants. Not only are they edible & highly nutritious (8x better than spinach?), they are one of the first tender greens to come up in the spring, and offer a source of food for humans or animals. Tons of health benefits, like fighting off urinary infections, and helping with allergies, etc. They grow in rich soils mostly.Why? What's the specific benefit? I'm not trying to challenge just genuinely curious.
That's awesome information. Thank you.Too many benefits to even list about nettles. Amazing plants. Not only are they edible & highly nutritious (8x better than spinach?), they are one of the first tender greens to come up in the spring, and offer a source of food for humans or animals. Tons of health benefits, like fighting off urinary infections, and helping with allergies, etc. They grow in rich soils mostly.
I've been around them my whole life, and can walk through a 9ft tall patch like its no big deal. I'll grab them with my hand and eat raw leaves just to show people they are wussies when they get stung, lol. Once cooked\dried out they lose that effect.
Anyway.. You can put them right in a bucket with water, and let it break down and steep into a tea for a few weeks, and you have possibly the best liquid brewed fertilizer tea you could ask for. Even has anti fungal and anti bacterial properties.
Thanks for link! Do you have any for his other books?A great resource of information.
I'm just going to experiment . But would river water be a problem?Guano tea is great, but it's considered nutrient tea. I prefer to top dress with guano. It's easier. I actually haven't even made a tea in years. Too lazy. I just mix dry amendments with some EWC or compost and pumice and mix it in and water.
Teas are great, but I'm too lazy anymore. I do cheat and add microbes like Rootwise to my water sometimes though. The top dressing probably works about the same, but not as fast. Could even be better since it's getting little doses of microbes constantly vs a huge dose with a tea. I don't know, but it sounds good,
It's actually probably better than most people's tap water.I'm just going to experiment . But would river water be a problem?
A tropical river with houses up stream and marine plant life?