TimeTraveler
User of Advanced Lunar Technology
Hey all! I'm mixing up a batch of soil for my gardening this year; not just MJ but also for various fruits, veggies, and herbs I'll be growing as well. As a result I'm trying to keep it fairly all purpose, with plans to modify it for given plants after planting with teas and additives. Not all the measurements are precise, as I had a few small bags of various things I used up to get rid of them in the mix.
Here's the basic recipe, which I mixed up in a 50 gallon tub (filled it most of the way, I'd say I've got about 45 gallons or so):
50# Composted Cow Manue
50# Mushroom Compost
15# Earthworm Castings
50# Top soil
12 quarts Vermiculite
3 gallons Perlite
6 cups Greensand
8# FoxFarm basic potting soil mix
2 cups Down to Earth All Purpose Fertilizer (4-6-2)
300 ml Liquid Kelp
5# Sand
3 cups Dolomite
3 cups used coffee grounds
2 oz biological inoculant
2 gallons rainwater
2 cups Epsom salts
1 cup humic acid
1 cup azomite
Basically, I mixed up the composts, EWC, top soil, and leftover potting mix to give myself a base soil without a lot of amendments. Then I added perlite, vermiculite, and sand to give it good water retention and drainage (I'm trying to minimize my peat usage, as it's really hard for me to come by sustainably harvested peat around here). The plan was to create a nice, loose, loamy garden soil that was rich in organic material and microbial life with good planting properties.
Next, the nutrients and additives were mixed in to help create a TLO-style environment: coffee grounds and all-purpose fertilizer, epsom salts, azomite, and kelp provided a variety of sources for major and trace nutrients and minerals. I added the lime to counter the acidity of the grounds, and provide its own nutrients, and the humic acid was added because I figured I'd need a good source of it since I wasn't adding peat. Rainwater and biological inoculant were used to provide a rich, ph-friendly source of microbial life to boost the organisms present in the composts and EWC.
It looks nice, dark (but not that rich, chocolatey dark I see in some soil pics), and has a good earthy smell to it. My plan is to let it cook for about a month or so before starting my containers. Any thoughts or advice on additives?
Here's the basic recipe, which I mixed up in a 50 gallon tub (filled it most of the way, I'd say I've got about 45 gallons or so):
50# Composted Cow Manue
50# Mushroom Compost
15# Earthworm Castings
50# Top soil
12 quarts Vermiculite
3 gallons Perlite
6 cups Greensand
8# FoxFarm basic potting soil mix
2 cups Down to Earth All Purpose Fertilizer (4-6-2)
300 ml Liquid Kelp
5# Sand
3 cups Dolomite
3 cups used coffee grounds
2 oz biological inoculant
2 gallons rainwater
2 cups Epsom salts
1 cup humic acid
1 cup azomite
Basically, I mixed up the composts, EWC, top soil, and leftover potting mix to give myself a base soil without a lot of amendments. Then I added perlite, vermiculite, and sand to give it good water retention and drainage (I'm trying to minimize my peat usage, as it's really hard for me to come by sustainably harvested peat around here). The plan was to create a nice, loose, loamy garden soil that was rich in organic material and microbial life with good planting properties.
Next, the nutrients and additives were mixed in to help create a TLO-style environment: coffee grounds and all-purpose fertilizer, epsom salts, azomite, and kelp provided a variety of sources for major and trace nutrients and minerals. I added the lime to counter the acidity of the grounds, and provide its own nutrients, and the humic acid was added because I figured I'd need a good source of it since I wasn't adding peat. Rainwater and biological inoculant were used to provide a rich, ph-friendly source of microbial life to boost the organisms present in the composts and EWC.
It looks nice, dark (but not that rich, chocolatey dark I see in some soil pics), and has a good earthy smell to it. My plan is to let it cook for about a month or so before starting my containers. Any thoughts or advice on additives?