Thai_Lights
Well-Known Member
Roughly 1000 worms in a lb right
Roughly yes.Roughly 1000 worms in a lb right
I’m not entirely sure dude. I don’t weigh anything. I just kinda dump it all on top and cover it up with some carbon. They eat it all, really fast. I chop everything up really good probably more than necessary.Awesome story my man..
Are your worms eating the equivalent to their body weight daily roughly !?
Just wanna thank you again, Wet. After even this short time, going back and rereading the things you’ve told me has been invaluable. Thank you.Your intended mix leaves me less than impressed mainly because over the years I've tried similar with less than stellar results.
I've only been doing organics for ~10 years, but have been growing "stuff" and using the same basic mix for over 45 years. Haven't made every mistake there is to make but sure have made a bunch over the years and still manage to find new ones. LOL
My basic mix now is roughly
40% peat moss
40% aeration (perlite)
20% humus (10% vermicompost, 10% pine bark fines) I use no "thermal" compost at all.
I'm unable to make my own compost (disabled), and avoid using anything I don't make from scratch, so, no bagged compost.
The vermicompost gets varied somewhat because I have 6 bins ranging from a few months old to well over a year, so I have actual 'vermicompost' to nearly pure EWC to choose from. The pure EWC is so dense even using 10% is kinda pushing it.
Your 20% pumice simply is not going to give you adequate aeration. I would really suggest closer to 40% aeration using perlite till you see how all this works together. These LOS mixes get very dense over time and not enough aeration is a root cause of many problems and many that look like something else entirely. Get it right first with the perlite and then experiment with the pumice. I'm from SoFl and can tell you that pumice is really spendy down there, especially compared to perlite.
Anyway, HTH
Wet
You’re the man- thank you so much.Plus rep for going organic. I'm a little jealous that you have access to those resources.
I think what you're asking is can you rely on castings as your nitrogen source and the answer is yes. But and in my experience you need to be careful bc Cannabis is sensitive to an overly rich soil. 50% by volume is too much imo but given that castings are well composted I don't think it'll burn but I don't know. I've never used that much. The thing is though it's overkill. You won't get bigger, better, best. There's only so much good stuff the plant can handle after that its a waste. Furthermore Cannabis is adapted to growing in fertile well drained soil with little organic matter. Look at where the landrace strains grow. Look at where the species has adapted itself.
My organic mix is roughly as follows:
Peat/lite base. Promix is good or a substitute. I make my base from peat and add the perlite. I like the larger sizes of perlite rather than the small particles.
I use composted manure from home depot.
About 20 lbs castings, rock dust or azomite, greensand, rock phosphate and hort grade charcoal. The charcoal gives the nutrients a surface to cling to and it also has other benefits as well.
I stopped using meals like blood and bone bc I don't cook my soil. I use it fresh and never get burn or claw anymore. Blood and bone are excellent sources of N but a little goes a long way.
Over time you'll learn what works best for you but going Organic is a great first step. Your soil will literally be alive. The plants will have everything they need for your entire cycle. Nothing to add but water. No flush will be necessary. Remember though that any added fertilizer will hurt the microbes so don't use it. You won't need it anyway.
I'm always up for helping guys out and I've walked many guys through their first grow so don't hesitate to ask.
Download a book titled Teaming with Microbes. Its a good read for any soil grower and will give you a better understanding on the dynamics of soil. After reading Teaming with Microbes you'll never want to grow any other way. Good luck.
Yeah I’m there man, just didn’t wanna fish thru 500 pages. Thanks for redirection!
I highly suggest reading the whole thread. I did and it was well worth it. Took like 3 months lol but it was the most i have ever learned out of 1 thread. Invaluable info. Happy growing.Yeah I’m there man, just didn’t wanna fish thru 500 pages. Thanks for redirection!
I’m correcting what I have going on today. Yes my castings steam. Because of the amount of worms, everything gets eaten and broken down so quickly, too quickly. People let their bins sit for months before harvesting, but that’s cuz it takes months to make everything look broken down. These are too fresh and they steam. I’ve gotta leave it in large piles and turn it a whileYour castings steam?
I feed these worms and take their castings from what they’ve eaten in less than a week. It doesn’t take any longer than that for them to turn it into black, airy, fluffy, consistent, unrecognizable castings. They’re just super rich gotta age a bit.Your castings steam?
From my experience it has been 50% base (peat) and 40% humus is the most you would want to go for a mixAnd while Youre all here looking if I’m going to build a ”super soil” but I’m not really buying into Subcools recipe, would you call it a good base at 50% compost, 25% peat and 25% perlite(or pumice or lava rock)? Thoughts on biochar?
And again, can all 50% of compost be worm castings if variety of materials fed to worms? If not, what percentage of my compost can be worm castings?
Thank You all so much.
-Beard