Organicgrow42
Well-Known Member
I used buildasoil.com it's all there basically under blog section
Beat me to it!I used buildasoil.com it's all there basically under blog section
Well it depends on the situation on amounts used. For my kelp teas I'll usually take a handful (crude measurement I know) of kelp meal per gallon and bubble it for 24-36 hours then water with it undiluted or diluted by up to 4x the water. I also favor coots ready to use kelp method that involves hydrating kelp, blending, and storing as is in the fridge so its ready to be stirred into the appropriate amount of water and be ready to go. I like kelp in all stages honestly. I avoid any sources of nutrition last week or two of bloom though. Just light waterings.
so why no on the molasses?Also kinda interesting that folks are starting to steer clear of molasses
So after years of exploring teas and seeing many different methods, I am now finding Elaine is saying NO to molasses?
She is saying to use kelp meal, lots of rich compost, and add fish hydrosylate if you want N boost or more fungi.
I am going to run some trials comparing her recipes in the coming weeks to see how the teas compare.
I get great brews around 60 degrees for 48 hours, lots of hyphae and if it goes longer plenty of bacteria. The obvious quality level of EWC determines the quality of the tea, but cutting molasses and using kelp meal and hydrosylate as the only food stock seems very different.
It's preference for me tooso why no on the molasses?
Interesting!So after years of exploring teas and seeing many different methods, I am now finding Elaine is saying NO to molasses?
She is saying to use kelp meal, lots of rich compost, and add fish hydrosylate if you want N boost or more fungi.
Soil Food Web Gardening
...with compost teas
...any questions or comments about the book are welcome, I'd love to discuss it....(text from the book, "Teaming with Microbes" written by Jeff Lowenfels and Wayne Lewis)
...+ REP if you like.
....the 19 rules!
Alaska fish will kill your microbes and it is not organic. The stuff smells like thrown up cat shit.....Why is that? Because they start with a harbor trash fish (Menhaden which is high in mercury and PCBs) and extract the protiens for pet food and oils for codfish oil, and then boiled in chlorinated water (sometimes Cl as high as 14% in finished product because Cl is concentrated after evaporation.)yes i would consider using these........
https://www.amazon.com/Alaska-Emulsion-Fertilizer-Concentrate-Gallon/dp/B002RH0B26/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1476973598&sr=8-1&keywords=alaskan+fish+emulsion
I DID NOT like neptunes harvest products either. that and they are pricey as well at neptunes. which is crazy because they are out of the new england east coast man wtf lol.
Alaska fish will kill your microbes and it is not organic. The stuff smells like thrown up cat shit.....Why is that? Because they start with a harbor trash fish (Menhaden which is high in mercury and PCBs) and extract the protiens for pet food and oils for codfish oil, and then boiled in chlorinated water (sometimes Cl as high as 14% in finished product because Cl is concentrated after evaporation.)
Neptune's Harvest Emulsions
- Uses several species of fish vs 1 type of fish (trash fish)
- No offensive odor vs Stinks
- Cold processed vs Cooked
- No oils removed vs Oils removed
- No meal removed (except Fillet) vs Meal removed
- No chlorine vs Contains chlorine
- Won't clog equipment vs Clogs equipment
Hydrolysate is the ONLY fish you want, it doesn't have to be Neptunes but their product is pricey because it is better quality.
https://www.fedcoseeds.com/ogs/search?item=8292
$75 for 5 gallons