unspecified
Well-Known Member
My soil
400 gallons new roots organic 707
400 gallons used roots organic 707
400 gallons worth of dirt from my compost pile
50lb bag blood meal
25lb bag alfalfa meal
120 quarts (6 bags worm castings)
10 gallons 12-12-2 pruvian bat quano
6 bags bags of general organics ancient forest
5 lbs of kelp meal
10 lbs dolomite lime
10 lbs bone meal.
all the poop from 3 alpacas, they all poop in one spot so its easy to collect.
my tea
Beneficial biologicals Sea Green
general organics ancient forest (lots of bacteria and fungi)
blood meal
worm castings with kelp and volcanic ash
bat and seabird guano
molasses
compost from my compost pile (old yard waste, alpaca and dog poop, left over food, old soil, ash from burning oak in my fire place, and anything else that can go in a compost pile)
I also us a lot of mychoriza during transplanting.
I brew in a 32 gallon garbage can. I put equal parts (3 cups) of ancient forest, blood meal, worm castings with kelp meal and volcanic ash, 12-12-2 guano, compost pile dirt, I use 150-200 ml of molasses, 2 tablespoons of Sea Green. My brew stays the exact same all year, veg or flower... diluted 50% before watering. used every other watering during veg used and every watering during flowering.
I'm thinking about trying teas specific to veg and flower or making fungal and bacterial teas separately. So input would be great. I've read a couple peoples tea recipies but would like to know more about why they work.
I don't know a lot about the organic but this soil and tea has worked well for me over the years.
400 gallons new roots organic 707
400 gallons used roots organic 707
400 gallons worth of dirt from my compost pile
50lb bag blood meal
25lb bag alfalfa meal
120 quarts (6 bags worm castings)
10 gallons 12-12-2 pruvian bat quano
6 bags bags of general organics ancient forest
5 lbs of kelp meal
10 lbs dolomite lime
10 lbs bone meal.
all the poop from 3 alpacas, they all poop in one spot so its easy to collect.
my tea
Beneficial biologicals Sea Green
general organics ancient forest (lots of bacteria and fungi)
blood meal
worm castings with kelp and volcanic ash
bat and seabird guano
molasses
compost from my compost pile (old yard waste, alpaca and dog poop, left over food, old soil, ash from burning oak in my fire place, and anything else that can go in a compost pile)
I also us a lot of mychoriza during transplanting.
I brew in a 32 gallon garbage can. I put equal parts (3 cups) of ancient forest, blood meal, worm castings with kelp meal and volcanic ash, 12-12-2 guano, compost pile dirt, I use 150-200 ml of molasses, 2 tablespoons of Sea Green. My brew stays the exact same all year, veg or flower... diluted 50% before watering. used every other watering during veg used and every watering during flowering.
I'm thinking about trying teas specific to veg and flower or making fungal and bacterial teas separately. So input would be great. I've read a couple peoples tea recipies but would like to know more about why they work.
I don't know a lot about the organic but this soil and tea has worked well for me over the years.