Kis organics? Im using the kindsoil now because of the simplicity but am now doing my homework. ive picked eyes on fire brain some and he gave me a months worth of homework! Thanks for your help spreading the knowledge
Sure, man. I haven't used kind soil or gbd soil, so I can't comment on those. I only have experience with kisorganics. It is meant to be reused with minimal addition each year/cycle, adding a little fresh compost or castings and a very small portion of the nutrient pack (I think just a 1/10th or 1/15th of a pack, which amounts to like 4 or 5 bucks worth at most). They have tested reusing the soil in indoor beds for up to 5 years, and is said to improve over time. Of course, with me mixing in some coco, and using some bottle nutes, I might be messing with the design, it is intended for peat. I'm storing it though to reammend and trial in the future.
Is kind soil designed to reuse for several crops? If no, then there is a significant difference in cost.
Kis organics makes the nutes pack so you can buy the local base mix you like and mix yourself.
You can also buy ready-made bags from them. Here it is:
It's 35 bucks, and after shipping it's probably closer to 55. They also make a bag with biochar in it for 10 more, but at that point, you can just source that separately if you want. I did use char in my mix this year.
55 bucks sounds like a lot for 1.5cf of soil, but that said, you're probably going to spend 20, 25 easy for your roots organic mix, promix, or whatever bags you're using, and then you have to use more bottle nutes, calmag and stuff. Also, maybe more difficult to cleanse and reuse at that point. This stuff, once you have it, you can lightly amend for next to nothing and reuse.
My next round, I'm going to go ahead and buy a bag of their ready made. I'm about out of soil and don't need to buy and mix a full batch (30 to 60 gallons at 100 - 50% strength ).
I'm going to lightly cut it to 75 or 80% and try to water only, although I do like LIGHT carbs with bokashi and mycos/trichoderms bubbled up and drenched in every week or 10 days to keep things moving. Somehow, I don't think autos need 100% strength, but maybe I'll do it anyways and see.
I'm not stumping for any brands and don't want to harsh out people that enjoy their own style with chems or whatever, but I'm super impressed with the ease and quality using the stuff I do, I feel better about the methods too, inside you know like warm and fuzzy, this feels natural and holistic. Lol. If you're looking to try organics or a new set in general, I don't think you will go wrong with this as I've showed you.
