Feedback Pls! Forrest Organic Layer

lakesidegrower

Well-Known Member
Hey all! I've had way tom much time on my hands working from home, venturing down a soil build and waiting for my inputs to arrive. I've wanted to source soil amendments from my natural environment around me (live in a Borreal forrest). We have 4 feet of snow and its currently -20C but I ventured in the bush to dig up some of the organic layer on the forrest floor to se if it might make a good soil input. I've attached the pics, but the trees around are a mix of deciduous and evergreen, with the area I sourced being majority deciduous.

There is a distinct litter layer on top, but immediately below is an organic layer made up of composted leaf and pine needles. Unless I am mistaken, the other part is worm castings... take a look at the pics and let me know (pics attached of it picked from the soil, then crushed) it would likely have come from earthworms and they dominate the worm pops locally. The insects are dormant now obviously, but I've found a few small back beetles alive, I'm sure more life to come with it now being inside lol. There is also decomposed wood chunks and root material, there and also traces of sand and tiny snail/crustacean shells. The consistency when broken up is fluffy like peat, seems to have the same water retention qualities as peat. The smell is incredibly earthy, its like spring forrest in a bucket haha

So my concern is that I don't want to just be tossing this into my mix without giving it some thought as to how it would benefit my mix. I plan to do 1:1:1 or 40/40/20 of peat:aeration:EWC/humus. I also have kelp meal, alfalfa meal, insect frass, glacial dust Gaia all purpose 4-4-4 and bloom 2-8-4 and makes flower myko on the way. Also plan to include charged biochar. Ultimate goal is to build a (potentially) water only no-till soil. Looking for advice on how to potentially proportion in the forrest compost...

I also am aware that pine needles tend to acidify the soil, but my understandings that about 4 weeks after the fall to the ground the pH starts to drop and ends up being between 6.0-6.9 once the terpenes and chlorophyl degrade and all that is left is the pine husk - this is what makes up the 'pine needles' proportion of the compost. I do plan to pH this compost, just waiting on my new reader but hopefully its in line with something between 6 and 7. I can see myco on the decomposed pine and birch woods, and also see myco threads throughout the soil. I'm wondering if there would be value in amending or 'processing' the forrest compost further before adding to soil (ie. adding dry amendments to further break down the mix, or inoculating with an activated EM1 like lacto b, or even adding some Bokashi to the forrest compost mix and letting it cook for a bit before cooking with the final mix).

I've also read about using this layer as a mulch on top of the pots, and the guidance tends to be to bake natural inputs like this to eliminate the risk of unwanted pests or disease. But to me this almost defeats the purpose of using it and benefiting from the micros and life that is inside it. Unless killing what's there and adding your own micros is the way to go about it.

Have leaned a ton from many of you guys - any advice/info/harsh criticism is welcomed!



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Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
I have a grow buddy who uses mostly just forest floor soil and simply adds a fertilizer. Plant stay healthy and green into late flowering. If you can see the mycorrhizae you know it’s loaded with fungi. Could not tell you the exact ratios but I know he adds extra perlite for aeration. I would also add in some diatomaceous earth to control the creepy crawlers.
 

lakesidegrower

Well-Known Member
I figured there might be some growers out there who incorporate it, really interesting that ur friend uses it as a majority base. I could definitely see it; the texture feels like a very airy soil mix, and if I’m not mistaken and the layer underneath the compost is working castings then I don’t see why you couldn’t use it as a majority base for a soil.

I’ve heard mixed things about diatomaceous earth; that it’s beneficial for crawling pests but that it also can hard beneficial bugs/predators. Would you top dress or add on top? What proportion would you suggest if it is mixed?
 

youraveragehorticulturist

Well-Known Member
I say to Use That Stuff! The benefit to you dirt would be the diversity of microbes and particle size/texture it would as to your mix.

I don't think you're going to find a recipe or exact guidelines for using your forest stuff, just toss it in there!

I wouldn't bother adding EM-1 or lacto or anything. And I definitely wouldn't bake it in the oven!

It can be tough that first time to take a leap of faith and put stuff you found on the ground in the soil you're trying so carefully to build, but don't worry! If a bug ate fresh plants, why would it be living on the snow coved forest floor where there are no fresh plants to munch on?

Break up those wood chunks and mix 1/2 gallon to a gallon into every cubic foot of your soil. Or top dress your plants with 1/2 cup of forest litter per gallon of pot size.

If you're really worried, make some compost tea with the forest stuff.

Did you get a fancy, expensive soil pH meter? It might be interesting to see the pH of the forest stuff, so please update us.
 

lakesidegrower

Well-Known Member
I say to Use That Stuff! The benefit to you dirt would be the diversity of microbes and particle size/texture it would as to your mix.

I don't think you're going to find a recipe or exact guidelines for using your forest stuff, just toss it in there!

I wouldn't bother adding EM-1 or lacto or anything. And I definitely wouldn't bake it in the oven!

It can be tough that first time to take a leap of faith and put stuff you found on the ground in the soil you're trying so carefully to build, but don't worry! If a bug ate fresh plants, why would it be living on the snow coved forest floor where there are no fresh plants to munch on?

Break up those wood chunks and mix 1/2 gallon to a gallon into every cubic foot of your soil. Or top dress your plants with 1/2 cup of forest litter per gallon of pot size.

If you're really worried, make some compost tea with the forest stuff.

Did you get a fancy, expensive soil pH meter? It might be interesting to see the pH of the forest stuff, so please update us.
haha I like how you think - I really do tend to overthink things most of the time

I really like the idea of mulching with this stuff, have also considering using living green moss, I believe its sphagnum moss....we have tons of it around, its about 2" thick and it stays bright green under all that snow throughout the winter. I think it would make a great mulch layer as well - a truly living mulch

Unfortunately no fancy pH meter for me this round, replaced a cheap one with another cheap one. To be honest the cheapo one did me pretty well lol
 
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