MustangStudFarm
Well-Known Member
What I can tell from having my soil tested is that manure composts are usually very high in phosphorus and potassium but very low in trace minerals. If you look at a bag of Malibu compost, they use comfrey, borage, and few other things to add the micronutrients. I still haven't completely figured out how to use manure compost, but Alan Adkisson grew up on a farm and ferments helped with him with manure toxicity. He takes pride in the fact that EM1 and other ferments will help reduce toxicity in the soil. It was an eye opener for me because I have been using rabbit manure for a few years and I always had mixed results. At the same time, the worm bin that I made out of rabbit bedding never really had a healthy worm population until this winter when I added several gallons of bokashi to it. I used Azomite and Greensand in the bokashi, so I like to think that it addressed more than one issue. The bokashi warmed up the worm bin during peak winter weather and the worms looked healthier than ever. Red wheat bran has Mn and that is the trace mineral that I was lacking the most. Plus, azomite and greensand have a decent amount of Mn also. I feel like bokashi bran is one of missing puzzle pieces that I have been missing.I saw a grow that had MASSIVE plants... the recipe in the soil... composted cow manure.. and epsom tomato tone thats IT.. they things GIANTS... granted they were outdoor but they were outdoor in northern WI lol .. so simple imputs really might be best.... last year in my outdoor garden I used JUST composted cow manure... I needed tomato skyscraper cages.. it was ridiculous... needless to say once the ground un freezes around here I will be ordering a literal dump truck load of the shit lol
I was about to mix up another batch of bokashi during this weekend. Let me know if you are lost on anything. There is a Grokashi recipe out there but it is pretty expensive to put together, I'll probably do it after next harvest.