Fish hydrolysate

hecno

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Well ,here is my first go at it . My aim is to use it for the soil . So I used 1.5 kg of ground up W.A Pilchards [ cold water sardines ] cost $12.50 -- next time I will just get them off me mates - to that I added 500 ml of unsulfured molasses - 120 ml of Lactobacillus and 4.5 ltr of water , when fermentation is finished I am thinking of adding liquid Humate at 10 ml , by time it is done and strained I am thinking I should get at least 3 ltr , The bucket I am using is sealed , way to many bugs in the tropics , that is why I have a home brwe air lock , I meant to put another one in but forgot but I'll get one tomorrow . If I was to buy ithis stuff I would be looking at $40 a ltr with shipping .
Bugger that :biggrin: . Now guys if any of you have recipes for this just post them here and if you think I need to add something put ya 2 bobs worth in , it is all about learning . :thumbsup:
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  • Homemade Fish Fertilizer
    ***For an illustrated example of this recipe, check out the farm log here. The flog has all kinds of good stuff, sign up to get the updates via email!***

    Fish fertilizer is an awesome product for promoting plant growth. It’s high in Nitrogen for growing plants, can be naturally produced, and is an awesome food for microbes! Fungi love this stuff. Fish fertilizer can be expensive in the store, but it is easily produced at home. This is a great recipe for making your own fish hydrolysate fertilizer. First lets look at the two main types of fish fertilizer:

    Fish Emulsion
    Fish emulsion fertilizer is made several different ways depending on who is making it. The important thing to know is that fish emulsion goes through two stages of processing. The first stage breaks down the fish parts using enzymes, proteases, or chemicals. Then, and this is the important part, heat is used to break it down further and allow oils and other things like amino acids to be more easily removed. It’s this second stage of processing that makes fish emulsion less advantageous than fish hydrolysate. Fish emulsion fertilizer lacks many oils and proteins that fish hydrolysate fertilizer has in abundance. So let’s look at that!

    Fish Hydrolysate
    Fish hydrolysate fertilizer generally starts out the same way as fish emulsion. It gets broken down using enzymes, proteases, or chemicals. However, fish hydryolysate doesn’t undergo the heating and skimming process that you get with the fish emulsion. The higher quality fish hydrolysates only undergo “cold-processing” which just means they are never heated enough to break down significant amino acid chains. Good fish hydrolysate also retains the fats and oils that microbes love!

    Our Fish Fertilizer Recipe
    This method of making fish fertilizer is awesome because it is a cold process, chemical-free, completely organic way to make fish fertilizer right at home. While fish emulsion lacks beneficial ingredients vital to the final product, this fish hydrolysate recipe preserves all those active ingredients. You don’t want to miss out on those oils that microbes love. Try this recipe in the yard or in a raised bed garden (If you are a novice gardener you can view videos online to learn how to plant a raised bed garden)

    How to make your own fish fertilizer:
    1. Buy a fish.
      TIP: Any kind of fish will work. In fact, you might as well use trash fish, or fish discards like fish heads, guts, etc. I like to use whole fishes though as I think that makes for a better product.
    2. Now, ideally you would throw the fish into a blender to mash it up into little pieces. I cut my fish into 8ths or so and then chuck it into my kitchen blender but I’m a bit of a caveman. If you’re squeamish, buy a separate blender for this, just make sure it is powerful enough, mine is 500W and works fine for small-medium size fishes. Remember, the finer the fish bits, the more effective the fermentation.
    3. Add water. You can use a simple guide of 3:1 – 3 parts water to 1 part ferment material. 1 roughly 8in tilapia comes to about 500mL when ground up, so I add about 1500mL water.
      TIP: ALWAYS USE NON-CHLORINATED WATER. Chlorine kills microbes. Simply let your chlorinated tap water sit for several hours, allowing the chlorine to dissipate. I let it sit overnight generally.
    4. If you are using a blender, blend up the mixture. The water helps keep it loose so it blends much better after you add the water.
    5. Add lacto bacilli to blended fish mixture. I use 2tbsp per L. You can use more or less if you want. 2tbsp/L is plenty though. See our lactobacillus recipe for proper preparation and dilution of your lacto serum.
    6. Add 1/3 parts sugar. This should be 1/3 the amount of fish you’ve added. Sugar will be either molasses or normal cane sugar.
      TIP: Try not to use cane sugar since it is chemically bleached. Raw(unrefined) sugar like muscovado is best. In the Philippines we use molasses because it is cheap, but any glucose source works – syrup, honey, etc. Just use whatever is cheap. Glucose gives microbes energy. Whatever you have access to cheaply, go for it.
    7. If using sugar, the equivalency is about 1KG sugar = 1L solution. So if you have 500mL like my tilapia, you want 1/3 of that in sugar. You’d use about 167g sugar, or roughly ¾ cup.
    8. I blend the whole mixture up a bit. It’s good to have it as fine as possible.
    9. Up to you how much you blend it, I blend until I don’t hear so many bones crunching in the blades of the blender.
    10. Now you have liquefied fish, sugar, and lacto. Pour this mixture into a container. Loosely cover the container. No need to seal, because the container will explode as CO2 is released by fermentation. You just want to make sure other things don’t get into it. I use a container with a lid and loosely screw the cap on top (just make sure you don’t seal it because it WILL explode).
    11. The process takes anywhere from 3 weeks to over a month. How do you know its finished? By the smell.
    12. You know when it’s done when there is no smell anymore. During fermentation there is a nasty smell, but once completed, there will be almost no odor. You can open it, and put your nose right up to it. Take a whiff. Nothing but a faint vinegar smell. Now you know its done. Congratulations! You’ve made your own Fish Hydrolysate!
    13. Now, usually I transfer it to a smaller container, usually just a smaller water bottle, just for convenience. At this time, I use a strainer and a funnel to strain the bones and scales out of the hydrolysate. But don’t expect a lot. From a whole 8-10in tilapia, you will only get a little tiny pile of bones/scales. They will feel kind of rubbery, not brittle. Throw these in the compost pile or garden, they are excellent fertilizer and microbe food, already inoculated with microbes!
    14. Leave the cap on the strained concoction loose until you see no more little bubbles forming. Then cap it and store it for use as your own natural fertilizer.

    How to use this fish fertilizer:

    Mix 2tbsp/gal for applications.

    Plants
    • Use as a soil drench as opposed to foliar spray.
    • Inoculate compost to boost fungal population. This is huge – major growth booster of fungus.
    • Use in compost teas to boost fungal growth, add Nitrogen. Use at ¼ strength for this application(1/2 tbsp per gal).
 
I am looking at inoculating a huge pile of compost I am preparing for future grows and this seems like a good idea to test some out on. How should it be stored once it's done, and how long is the shelf life?
 
@NebulaNuggets being a fermented product and in a clean jar it will keep well , the only thing is to keep it in a cool place .
Fish products are an excellent sources of nutrition for soils and plants as fish contain the full spectrum of nutrients found in the planets waters. Plants rapidly respond to and grow vigorously when fish is regularly applied. Liquid fish contains significant quantities of protein Nitrogen (an important source of balanced Nitrogen) as well as a healthy balance of all 18 nutrients known to be significant for crop growth. All of these mineral nutrients are in protein chelated forms, which are usable by the crops and additionally are resistant to loss from leaching. Fish also contains more than 60 other trace minerals which have positive effects on soil biology and crop health.
Fish based proteins and other nutrients are rapidly assimilated by crops when applied via the foliage or through irrigation. The nutrients in fish are a quick and direct stimulant to the plants roots and leaves. Fish applications can rapidly improve crop fertility in virtually all situations. Additionally fish provides both immediate fertilizer “like” response as well as longer lasting fertility affect for later in the crops growth.

Liquid forms of fish provide balanced, moderate amounts of nitrogen and all of the other essential nutrients, plus many more trace minerals not found in chemical fertilizers. This balance helps to provide full spectrum fertility without excess of nitrogen and reduces problems with pests and diseases while increasing plant growth and vigor.

A significant additional benefit of fish hydrolysate, is the dramatic stimulation to the soils beneficial microorganisms such as bacteria and fungi, which consume, digest and release the abundant nutrients in the fish when it is applied to the soil. Fish products can make significant contribution to the overall fertility of the soil and crop while at the same time stimulating the biological activity in the soil, thus improving the quality of the soil for many years to come.
 
Thanks brother, this is another thing I can do here...Another step towards independence lol.
:pass:

Speaking of independence, my dad asked me this morning if I'd like to go fishing next week and I thought "hell yeah, that'll save me a trip to the grocery store and a few bucks!"
Got plenty of red wigglers for bait, almost a cost free endeavor to make up some fish fertilizer.
 
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