Someacdude
Active Member
Does the water softener have a bypass? I would just be paranoid about salt getting in there somehow.
We have never put salt into the container and it has been empty for years.Does the water softener have a bypass? I would just be paranoid about salt getting in there somehow.
I don't use guanos, so I'm not sure about that.Crud, i have
30 lbs worm castings
Blood meal
Bone meal
dolemite
azomite
and the idiots sent me seabird guano 12-11-2 instead of bat? Now what do i do?
Awesome, thanks so much, hats just the ingredients i already have, i was also thinking about some roots soil, whatcha think?I don't use guanos, so I'm not sure about that.
The kelp you are collecting has a good amount of K and some trace minerals as well. I'd buy a small box of alfalfa meal too as it has good npk values, and the triacontanol contained in it is a growth stimulator. The mineral end of your mix looks a little light ... I would try to source some rock dusts. You can use basalt in addition to, or in lieu of your rock dusts if you can't score some locally. Basalt is easier to find. Some green sand and gypsum may be a good idea too. You're going to want to seriously consider adding something as an IPM as well. Neem seed meal, and crabshell meal are both great. I'd consider BTI granules as well, and I know Rrog uses nematodes.
If you're planning on re-using this soil, I'd get some minerals mixed in there for sure as those take longer to become bio available, and will benefit you in future runs. The other stuff you can add as you go if you're on a budget.
I've never used Roots, but I'm sure it would be fine. If you are going to be amending your own soil you could also just buy a bale of peat moss, some perlite, and then add in your goodies. Will you be letting your mix sit and "cook" for a while? If so just go to Home Depot and pick up a 3 cf bale of Premier sphagum peat moss instead of the Roots. It's $10 for a bale. If you don't have time to let your soil sit then something like Roots might be better because they have already inoculated their soil and you will have some nutrients available to your plants from day one.Awesome, thanks so much, hats just the ingredients i already have, i was also thinking about some roots soil, whatcha think?
This is the first time ive read about peat moss, so just use the peat for the base then add the other ingredients ?I've never used Roots, but I'm sure it would be fine. If you are going to be amending your own soil you could also just buy a bale of peat moss, some perlite, and then add in your goodies. Will you be letting your mix sit and "cook" for a while? If so just go to Home Depot and pick up a 3 cf bale of Premier sphagum peat moss instead of the Roots. It's $10 for a bale. If you don't have time to let your soil sit then something like Roots might be better because they have already inoculated their soil and you will have some nutrients available to your plants from day one.
If you want to be on the safe side, you could pick up an organic general purpose fertilizer like Espoma plant-tone, or Down to Earth Vegan Mix and add that to your base. That way you will have some peace of mind that all of your bases are covered.
Your base would be:This is the first time ive read about peat moss, so just use the peat for the base then add the other ingredients ?
I think the last sentence is of huge importance.Sure not looking to alienate any growers and don't want to come off as holier-than-thou. I started the thread for exactly this sort of discussion.
I think a lot of people thing of organic farming as requiring a farm. Piles of compost, chickens shitting, soil cooking. I can relate to that thought. I've been looking at ways that someone tight on space can still compost and use a natural soil.
Bokashi is simply a small bucket of your table scraps or plant cuttings on the kitchen floor, or under the sink. Sealed up so no smell. The microbes in the bucket start breaking down your food scraps into some excellent fertilizer. Free.
For soil, I have two garbage cans cooking for the next grow. So all in all, maybe 12 square feet of floor is taken up.
We have to keep in mind that the soil microbes are an army of trillions. Their only mission is to support and defend the plant. If we add chemicals, that relationship is severely strained or gone, despite the presence of soil.