Someacdude
Active Member
Can i put grass clipping in my mix?
I am not a big fan of xtreme, I have not seen as good as results with it as a good all around myco with bact/trichoderma. I try to find the cheapest I can online with as wide of spectrum as I can. From what I understand all the companies get their mycorrhizal fungi from the same company and just get different mixes.What do you guys think of a layer of Azos and Mycos in the hole at the time of transplanting?
Could be hot (Nitrogen burn). Little won't hurtCan i put grass clipping in my mix?
Yep. I'm pretty sure MM mentioned that it's premier tech out of Montreal.I am not a big fan of xtreme, I have not seen as good as results with it as a good all around myco with bact/trichoderma. I try to find the cheapest I can online with as wide of spectrum as I can. From what I understand all the companies get their mycorrhizal fungi from the same company and just get different mixes.
Im putting it in my cooker so i wont be using it for months.Could be hot (Nitrogen burn). Little won't hurt
How much H2O is he bubbling that amount in?Coot has been using his various teas and this is one he keeps using. This is a compilation of a few posts or emails.
Alfalfa
Alfalfa is often grown to improve poor or depleted farmlands. Being a legume it fixes Nitrogen in the soil and the root system is massive and goes very deep into the sub-soil - deeper than other legumes and certainly deeper than most domesticated tree crops. This helps to break-up the soil structure allowing greater aeration and water movement in the root zone.
Plus it's up there with kelp meal, comfrey, stinging nettles and other bionutrient accumulators. If used correctly, as in the correct amount, it can add a lot to your garden's plants...
A combination of kelp meal & alfalfa tea is one that I use on a regular basis in the veg cycle and especially a few days after transplanting - it's like steroids.
1 cup of alfalfa meal (pellets) with 1/4 cup kelp meal - bubble for 24 hours or so. This is the strength for watering the soil and dilute that 1:1 with water for a foliar spray.
I do use alfalfa meal for making teas and then the material is then run through worm bins which is what I also do with kelp & neem meals. Even after making a tea approximately 50% of 'the stuff' remains so it's not worthless by any means.
-CC
Makes a BRILLIANT mulch, cheap and readily available so you can get into a mulching 'routine' with your grass clippings. We use big fat spreads of it to keep the fungus gnats out of the soil, seeing as it dries out really fast and doesn't re-hydrate all that easily.Could be hot (Nitrogen burn). Little won't hurt
So you mulch around the base of the plant with grass clippings? I used to do that on the farm, kept me from weeding.Makes a BRILLIANT mulch, cheap and readily available so you can get into a mulching 'routine' with your grass clippings. We use big fat spreads of it to keep the fungus gnats out of the soil, seeing as it dries out really fast and doesn't re-hydrate all that easily.
Yes indeed I do! But keep in mind that is outdoors, and not just my ganja plants. Outdoors the key to keeping and building soil health is MULCH MULCH MULCH and then more MULCH! The mulch naturally harvests microbes and keeps a great environment for them to live in too, and turns into lovely humus as time goes by. I have generated literally TONS of topsoil by continuous mulching. I have a veggie bed that has now risen a good 3 feet above ground level in as many years simply for zero-till and mulching.So you mulch around the base of the plant with grass clippings? I used to do that on the farm, kept me from weeding.
You are the man. My outdoor gardens are going to be so nice next year. Thanks for the info on the Alfalfa tea Rrog. You guys are a source of inspiration.Yes indeed I do! But keep in mind that is outdoors, and not just my ganja plants. Outdoors the key to keeping and building soil health is MULCH MULCH MULCH and then more MULCH! The mulch naturally harvests microbes and keeps a great environment for them to live in too, and turns into lovely humus as time goes by. I have generated literally TONS of topsoil by continuous mulching. I have a veggie bed that has now risen a good 3 feet above ground level in as many years simply for zero-till and mulching.
Seeing as I am getting into indoor soil gardening, I will start using mulch there too. But not on first runs, only as I start recycling bags of soil will I mulch, instead of taking the soil out and re-mixing I am simply going to plant in the same container again and then mulch it up. Figure it will supply fresh organic matter at a pace similar to the needs of the soil microbes. Win/Win situation
Never any shortage of lawn clippings in the green mountain state I tell ya! Verynice info Hamish. Think I have a sleestack on steroids atm lol, i'll take pics tomarrow and find a place that's appropriate to share them at. Thought about doing a grow journal on them but there already into flowering so yeah there's that issue. Anyway this plant got reg feedings and a tricarboxylic acid auxilary supplement and its doing well.Makes a BRILLIANT mulch, cheap and readily available so you can get into a mulching 'routine' with your grass clippings. We use big fat spreads of it to keep the fungus gnats out of the soil, seeing as it dries out really fast and doesn't re-hydrate all that easily.
Yeppy, used to do that all the time, no weeding is the best part.Yes indeed I do! But keep in mind that is outdoors, and not just my ganja plants. Outdoors the key to keeping and building soil health is MULCH MULCH MULCH and then more MULCH! The mulch naturally harvests microbes and keeps a great environment for them to live in too, and turns into lovely humus as time goes by. I have generated literally TONS of topsoil by continuous mulching. I have a veggie bed that has now risen a good 3 feet above ground level in as many years simply for zero-till and mulching.
Seeing as I am getting into indoor soil gardening, I will start using mulch there too. But not on first runs, only as I start recycling bags of soil will I mulch, instead of taking the soil out and re-mixing I am simply going to plant in the same container again and then mulch it up. Figure it will supply fresh organic matter at a pace similar to the needs of the soil microbes. Win/Win situation
Are you serious bro?! That is just BADASS. For free too? You don't want to know what I charge people for a hessian bag full if they want to come fetch. And I now refuse to sell. Since you guys turned me onto this Living Soil thing, oh HELL NO!. Nobody's touching my aged horse poop.You are the man. My outdoor gardens are going to be so nice next year. Thanks for the info on the Alfalfa tea Rrog. You guys are a source of inspiration.
I have a neighbor right next door to me that has a huge pile of woodchips and horseshit. He spreads the woodchips out in his barn as flooring cover for his horses then tosses them in this huge pile. He turns it every two weeks with his tractor. He said I could use it. It has been there forever.
Just picked up 2 five gallon containers of dirt from the chicken yard, how much should i add to this mix ?Ok so now i have
Worm castings
Blood meal
Bone meal
Dolemite
azomite
Two pkgs or peat moss
one potting soil organic
1 bag of perlite
Besides epsom salts what am i missing?