I keep tellin ya You need a mix of aerobic vs anaerobic
I seen a lot of the chris trump stuff now. He's pretty good.
I'd like to see more proof of why you think compost tea's are a waste of time? Or just persona; preference?
I keep tellin ya You need a mix of aerobic vs anaerobic
That's a great advice, mate! I just listened to it and got a pretty good outcome. Thanks!GHO wrote: ↑Sun Oct 18, 2020 4:31 pmHi buddy, as a vegetable gardener I couldn't say for certain re the kind of herbs you are growing but, in theory there should be enough nutrition for that length of time. As mentioned previously, they were launched in multiples of 25l as some people are using small pots. The castings alone should have enough nutrition for most plants for 5-6 weeks. the issue as I see it is whether the pot can sustain the microbial life in such small volumes which is why I think you may need an occasional tea or something to reinvigorate or refresh the microorganisms.
These kits are a long term solution and the re-amendment is to ensure consistent levels of organic matter, minerals and micro nutrients for the microbial life to do their thing with rather than straight plant nutrition.
I'd highly recommend use of barley and cover crops whatever size you do. The advantages they bring are becoming fairly well known.
Will this work in a 25 litre pot, yes with some extra work and monitoring. A forty litre is what I'd suggest as a minimum, 50 litre is my recommendation. I've priced it so that 50L is the same price as everyone else's 40-42.5l packs and the inclusion of fresh castings where most systems seem to be using a combination of Coco and peat should give you an edge. I've never tested in smaller pots as the guidance is 40+L / 10+ gallons so I couldn't give you a definitive answer. I hope that makes sense buddy. A few of the chaps here have run smaller pots though from what I've seen and it does sound like they work for it a little.
Im just of the thinking that teas and extracts are for when you dont have space to add stuff to your pots. if you can top dress and water in you just watering a tea every time you water
In a big pot 50L+ leave it in. It'll break down on its own, but you can speed it up with humic acid and Barricade (one of my microbe products) which will digest stubble along with pathogens.Vador wrote: ↑Tue Oct 18, 2022 6:53 pmInteresting read, just learned i know absolutely nothing about growing organic.
I like the sound of this living soil though.
Couple of questions
1. When you chop the plant down do you dig the rootball out or do you try avoid disturbing the soil too much?
2. can the soil be reused straight away after harvest or do you have to cycle pots of living soil?
3. Does one of the living soil kits have everything youll need for one plant up until flower or is it advisable to get anything else to have on standby
Thanks
Thank you, definitely going to give this a try.GHO wrote: ↑Tue Oct 18, 2022 7:19 pmIn a big pot 50L+ leave it in. It'll break down on its own, but you can speed it up with humic acid and Barricade (one of my microbe products) which will digest stubble along with pathogens.
You 'may' need to top dress occasionally. I find need for topdressing reduces in amount and frequency over a few cycles. Some plants are hungrier than others so you'll need to feel that out but I ran tomatoes for five months on one topdress this summer in a fresh mix. All looked healthy when I finally cut them down. That was 32L pots.
You can plant straight back in, do give it a top dress though.
My approach has evolved a bit over the last two years with some testing etc. There's a learning curve to soil as @GMO will no doubt confirm. But take the time to learn it and it's not much work. the revised kits will be available fairly soon when I pull my finger out