kratos015
Well-Known Member
I've been working on a project since mid-June that's been keeping me pretty busy. Had a blast with my last journal, and I've been realizing that I was much more organized when I had a journal on here as opposed to the multiple notebooks I've been using.
As always, my goal is to show how simple and affordable it is to cultivate plants in a living soil. There is a lot of poor information out there concerning not just "organic" growing, but plants in general.
Many "organic" websites thrive on ignorance. I feel that living soil is widely misunderstood, mistakenly associated with "organic" and as a result is sometimes viewed as "difficult and obscure". The reality is that this is the way things were designed to be. Building a soil shouldn't cost hundreds of dollars, and neither should maintaining it or anything else.
Here's what I got started on for pennies on the dollar.
6/20
9/12
9/24
I have been using this product (https://www.lowes.com/pd/Kellogg-3-cu-ft-Organic-Garden-Soil/3026867) for the past 1.5 years now, amazing stuff if your native dirt is sandy like mine.
$9 for 3 cuft of composted forest products, chicken manure, guano, castings, and kelp meal. Literally cheaper than peat moss, its insane. Just dig up some of your native dirt and mix it with this stuff and you have cheap and effective soil.
Soil
5 3 cuft bales of Kellogg (112.5g) = $45
1 4 cuft bag of perlite (30g) = $25
8 cu ft native dirt/sand (60g)
$70 for 1 cubic YARD (27 cuft/202.5g) of soil, about as cheap as it gets. That same $70 will only get you 4-6 bags of soil at your local hydro store.
Nutrients
Veg
I don't buy anything for veg nutes anymore. I drink coffee, so I have a shit ton of coffee grounds readily available at any time. I also haven't pissed in a toilet for over a year now. I either piss into a bottle and dilute it with water for a boost of N for the plants, or I piss on the compost pile to help break things down in very short order.
Literally zero reason to buy Nitrogen when we literally piss it for free.
The only thing I spend money on during veg now is Coconut water, one 16.9oz bottle per gallon of water. No more Neem Meal, no more Fish Emulsion, just coffee grounds and piss. I do use a little of whatever flower blend (4-8-4 or 4-6-3) in combination with the grounds and urine. Veg is handled for damn near free now.
Flower
Just as simple, I run whatever blend of bloom blend products happens to be on sale. I like Down to Earth's 4-8-4 Rose formula, or Dr. Earth's 4-6-3 Tomato and Herb formula. However, my local hardware store has a 4-8-3 bag of G&B fertilizer, 12 lbs for $17 as opposed to $15 for 4 lbs. I tend to use that as often as I can, 3 times the product for a couple bucks extra.
I top dress weekly with this stuff in flower, every 2-4 weeks in veg.
The only things I buy on a consistent basis are the organic bloom blends, TM-7, spinosad, silica, and coconut water. Extremely cheap.
Pest control is rotations of Spinosad and Habanero Pepper spray in combination with companion plants and the predator bugs that have taken residence here.
Each of the holes the plants are in are only 2 cuft (15 gallons). I only need and use 15 gallons of soil to grow plants even larger than this.
My native dirt here is sand, once a plant fills the soil I make and becomes a 15 gallon sized root ball, it can easily penetrate the sand and continue to grow roots through it. I get massive 50+ gallon sized root balls with only 15 gallons of soil, saving me even more money.
I started doing this in 2019, as I had an epiphany when I was staring at the desert across the street littered with various bushes, cacti, and mesquite trees. I was zoning out and staring at the plant life in the desert, wondering how they manage to even survive out there. I got my answer during monsoon season, where the rainfall is capable of making literal rivers and lakes, only for it to completely disappear within 24 hours.
I theorized that all of that water follows the path of least resistance underground in the sand, so there's likely somewhere underground where the water completely pools for the plant's roots to intake water. My property even has a well on it, so clearly there's water pooling underground on a massive scale if wells can be dug in the middle of the desert.
So, I had a theory. "What if I only use enough soil to create a root mass that is strong enough to penetrate the sand and grow outside of the soil and into the sand like the cacti and trees?"
I dug a ~2 cuft hole in the ground and filled it with the soil I made and planted my weed plants in them in April. The plants got to be the size of my roof. Not only did the taproot continue to grow outside of the 15g of soil, but the roots even spread out the sides. I had massive rootballs with only 15g of soil.
No, not only did I prove my theory as correct but I also learned more than just that. A "living soil" isn't restricted to soil that we make, everything happens around the rhizosphere as we already know. The rhizosphere exists wherever roots are, be it soil or sand. Once rootballs get to a certain point, it becomes a waste to keep using soil. We only need enough soil to establish roots that are strong enough to penetrate and grow into our native dirts.
Since then, I've only used 15 gallons of soil. The holes are in fact no-till, simply planting new plants into the holes/beds without messing with the soil.
I now finally have a veg/mother room after so many years without one, I'm finally able to run things consistently. For all plants, not just the weed!
Strains I'm growing now are Bruce Banner #3, BB #5, Zkittlz, and a finicky Banana sativa. Purple Wreck and LA Con will be added to the list once their respective mothers get large enough to clone consistently.
Veggies I've got going right now are tons of different tomatoes, sweet and hot peppers, cucumbers, various greens and herbs, and some jelly melons. Peas and green bean seeds will be sown within the week.
I have some banana tree starts and some 2 year old blackberry and raspberry canes that should be here in another week or so. They'll stay indoors in my veg room until around Feb-March, then go outside.
The idea is to attempt to create a mini-oasis microclimate within my backyard. I'm pretty stoked about how well things look in only 3 months time, and can't wait to see how things look back here this same time next year.
I plan on keeping this thread going indefinitely, just like the garden. The last time I did this there was some solid discussion and it was unbelievably simple for me to just look at my thread and look back for information instead of flipping through notebook after notebook.
Thanks for taking a look. Gonna be awesome to look back on these photos in another year or so.
Regards.
As always, my goal is to show how simple and affordable it is to cultivate plants in a living soil. There is a lot of poor information out there concerning not just "organic" growing, but plants in general.
Many "organic" websites thrive on ignorance. I feel that living soil is widely misunderstood, mistakenly associated with "organic" and as a result is sometimes viewed as "difficult and obscure". The reality is that this is the way things were designed to be. Building a soil shouldn't cost hundreds of dollars, and neither should maintaining it or anything else.
Here's what I got started on for pennies on the dollar.
6/20
9/12
9/24
I have been using this product (https://www.lowes.com/pd/Kellogg-3-cu-ft-Organic-Garden-Soil/3026867) for the past 1.5 years now, amazing stuff if your native dirt is sandy like mine.
$9 for 3 cuft of composted forest products, chicken manure, guano, castings, and kelp meal. Literally cheaper than peat moss, its insane. Just dig up some of your native dirt and mix it with this stuff and you have cheap and effective soil.
Soil
5 3 cuft bales of Kellogg (112.5g) = $45
1 4 cuft bag of perlite (30g) = $25
8 cu ft native dirt/sand (60g)
$70 for 1 cubic YARD (27 cuft/202.5g) of soil, about as cheap as it gets. That same $70 will only get you 4-6 bags of soil at your local hydro store.
Nutrients
Veg
I don't buy anything for veg nutes anymore. I drink coffee, so I have a shit ton of coffee grounds readily available at any time. I also haven't pissed in a toilet for over a year now. I either piss into a bottle and dilute it with water for a boost of N for the plants, or I piss on the compost pile to help break things down in very short order.
Literally zero reason to buy Nitrogen when we literally piss it for free.
The only thing I spend money on during veg now is Coconut water, one 16.9oz bottle per gallon of water. No more Neem Meal, no more Fish Emulsion, just coffee grounds and piss. I do use a little of whatever flower blend (4-8-4 or 4-6-3) in combination with the grounds and urine. Veg is handled for damn near free now.
Flower
Just as simple, I run whatever blend of bloom blend products happens to be on sale. I like Down to Earth's 4-8-4 Rose formula, or Dr. Earth's 4-6-3 Tomato and Herb formula. However, my local hardware store has a 4-8-3 bag of G&B fertilizer, 12 lbs for $17 as opposed to $15 for 4 lbs. I tend to use that as often as I can, 3 times the product for a couple bucks extra.
I top dress weekly with this stuff in flower, every 2-4 weeks in veg.
The only things I buy on a consistent basis are the organic bloom blends, TM-7, spinosad, silica, and coconut water. Extremely cheap.
Pest control is rotations of Spinosad and Habanero Pepper spray in combination with companion plants and the predator bugs that have taken residence here.
Each of the holes the plants are in are only 2 cuft (15 gallons). I only need and use 15 gallons of soil to grow plants even larger than this.
My native dirt here is sand, once a plant fills the soil I make and becomes a 15 gallon sized root ball, it can easily penetrate the sand and continue to grow roots through it. I get massive 50+ gallon sized root balls with only 15 gallons of soil, saving me even more money.
I started doing this in 2019, as I had an epiphany when I was staring at the desert across the street littered with various bushes, cacti, and mesquite trees. I was zoning out and staring at the plant life in the desert, wondering how they manage to even survive out there. I got my answer during monsoon season, where the rainfall is capable of making literal rivers and lakes, only for it to completely disappear within 24 hours.
I theorized that all of that water follows the path of least resistance underground in the sand, so there's likely somewhere underground where the water completely pools for the plant's roots to intake water. My property even has a well on it, so clearly there's water pooling underground on a massive scale if wells can be dug in the middle of the desert.
So, I had a theory. "What if I only use enough soil to create a root mass that is strong enough to penetrate the sand and grow outside of the soil and into the sand like the cacti and trees?"
I dug a ~2 cuft hole in the ground and filled it with the soil I made and planted my weed plants in them in April. The plants got to be the size of my roof. Not only did the taproot continue to grow outside of the 15g of soil, but the roots even spread out the sides. I had massive rootballs with only 15g of soil.
No, not only did I prove my theory as correct but I also learned more than just that. A "living soil" isn't restricted to soil that we make, everything happens around the rhizosphere as we already know. The rhizosphere exists wherever roots are, be it soil or sand. Once rootballs get to a certain point, it becomes a waste to keep using soil. We only need enough soil to establish roots that are strong enough to penetrate and grow into our native dirts.
Since then, I've only used 15 gallons of soil. The holes are in fact no-till, simply planting new plants into the holes/beds without messing with the soil.
I now finally have a veg/mother room after so many years without one, I'm finally able to run things consistently. For all plants, not just the weed!
Strains I'm growing now are Bruce Banner #3, BB #5, Zkittlz, and a finicky Banana sativa. Purple Wreck and LA Con will be added to the list once their respective mothers get large enough to clone consistently.
Veggies I've got going right now are tons of different tomatoes, sweet and hot peppers, cucumbers, various greens and herbs, and some jelly melons. Peas and green bean seeds will be sown within the week.
I have some banana tree starts and some 2 year old blackberry and raspberry canes that should be here in another week or so. They'll stay indoors in my veg room until around Feb-March, then go outside.
The idea is to attempt to create a mini-oasis microclimate within my backyard. I'm pretty stoked about how well things look in only 3 months time, and can't wait to see how things look back here this same time next year.
I plan on keeping this thread going indefinitely, just like the garden. The last time I did this there was some solid discussion and it was unbelievably simple for me to just look at my thread and look back for information instead of flipping through notebook after notebook.
Thanks for taking a look. Gonna be awesome to look back on these photos in another year or so.
Regards.