Growing with purely peat, pumice, compost and worm castings?

RenaissanceBrah

Active Member
I've read that all you really need is good compost (Bu's Blend) and good worm castings to grow... hoping to put that to the test :)

If I'll be growing using strictly an equal mix of peat moss, pumice and (compost + EWC), how well would my plants grow with that mix?

(Not looking for huge yields or super potency, growing for strictly positive effect, I don't mind lower potency).

I have an organic worm bin I've been cultivating for the past 8 months, so I have a ton of worm castings.

Just wondering about the ratios... For the compost part of the mix, should I do 50/50 mix of compost and worm castings? Or how should the worm castings play into the equation?

I picked up 10 three-gallon fabric pots, want to run them alongside my 30-gallon no-till pots, and plant regular seeds. If I get males, they'll be easier to move to another location, and the females I can just leave. Want to start playing with making my own seeds
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
I've read that all you really need is good compost (Bu's Blend) and good worm castings to grow... hoping to put that to the test :)

If I'll be growing using strictly an equal mix of peat moss, pumice and (compost + EWC), how well would my plants grow with that mix?

(Not looking for huge yields or super potency, growing for strictly positive effect, I don't mind lower potency).

I have an organic worm bin I've been cultivating for the past 8 months, so I have a ton of worm castings.

Just wondering about the ratios... For the compost part of the mix, should I do 50/50 mix of compost and worm castings? Or how should the worm castings play into the equation?

I picked up 10 three-gallon fabric pots, want to run them alongside my 30-gallon no-till pots, and plant regular seeds. If I get males, they'll be easier to move to another location, and the females I can just leave. Want to start playing with making my own seeds
Sounds like a good plan to me. I'd probably do 1/2 and 1/2, or 3/4 compost and 1/4 EWC. You can top dress with more of it later too, so I like to leave a little room in the pot for top dressing.
 

kratos015

Well-Known Member
You are correct, quality compost goes a long way. I run a similar mix to yours.

40% peat/40% perlite/20% compost or EWC. Only thing different about my mix is I add 4c basalt per cuft of base soil for my mineral input.

Also do 1/2c of Neem and Kelp Meals per cuft of base, as well as 1/2c of a quality 4-4-4 or 5-5-5 mix per cuft of base. I have found better results from top dressing with compost to cover my amendment top dress as opposed to loading the soil itself up with compost. Goes a long way to helping soil compaction, which is an inevitable result no matter what.
 

ComfortCreator

Well-Known Member
It would definitely work, and quite well but depend totally on one thing -- what the worms are fed.

If you feed the worms everything the plant could need, it will be amazing. If you buy ewc and they arent a complete and fully balanced compost, you would have problems.

So if someone has their own worm bin and feeds them well, your plan is an A+. That is a Coots style pro grow.

Because few of us do this, Kratos suggests the best adds to the mix to cover what likely will be missing.
 

MustangStudFarm

Well-Known Member
It would definitely work, and quite well but depend totally on one thing -- what the worms are fed.

If you feed the worms everything the plant could need, it will be amazing. If you buy ewc and they arent a complete and fully balanced compost, you would have problems.

So if someone has their own worm bin and feeds them well, your plan is an A+. That is a Coots style pro grow.

Because few of us do this, Kratos suggests the best adds to the mix to cover what likely will be missing.
I agree, not all composts are created equal lol...
 

kratos015

Well-Known Member
It would definitely work, and quite well but depend totally on one thing -- what the worms are fed.

If you feed the worms everything the plant could need, it will be amazing. If you buy ewc and they arent a complete and fully balanced compost, you would have problems.

So if someone has their own worm bin and feeds them well, your plan is an A+. That is a Coots style pro grow.

Because few of us do this, Kratos suggests the best adds to the mix to cover what likely will be missing.
This. 100%.

Consider the typical role people think compost has, and the role that it can have.

People tend to mistakenly believe that the primary role of compost is to provide life to a soil, when in reality the ultimate purpose of a compost should be to provide life and nutrition to a soil.

If your EWC has both life and nutrition in it, you can feed the plants with absolutely nothing but EWC and even compost for that matter. The issue is that many corporations, and many of us for that matter, tend to feed worms vegetable scraps and paper. Just like with a human, eating scraps will technically produce life, but will it produce nutrition as well?

By feeding your normal plant's top dress to your worms instead, you can produce castings capable of providing what the top dress does but on steroids.

This is where Coots' EWC comes into play. Because not only do you have the above, but you also have the texture/consistency of fresh EWC. This is why Coots can have 1/3 compost in his soil mix, because his EWC are light, airy, and fluffy. The texture/consistency of EWC on his level are absolutely nothing in comparison to that of typical compost one comes across; clumpy, not fully decomposed, and lacking that sweet earthy musk that is capable of producing a high within itself.

Since many of us, (myself included) do not have access to this quality of EWC/compost, it is best to go with 40% peat/40% aeration/20% compost. This is because, unless you have the highest quality compost (as in, properly homemade) then you will do more harm than good following Coots' 1:1:1 ratio.

Without having light, airy, fluffy, and nutritious compost then following the 1:1:1 ratio is more likely to result in rapid advancement of soil compaction, dry spots in the soil, poor soil texture/consistency, and by proxy mediocre growth at best. Even worse is when you attempt to do a no-till, because you cannot forget that the peat moss in your no-till soil will eventually combine with the organic inputs to become compost. The 40/40/20 ratio I use takes this into consideration

This is why most people cannot make no-till last long, they do not account for soil compaction. Soil compaction will fuck all of us, its inevitable, however it can be delayed if the above is taken into consideration. Not just the extra aeration/drainage, but the fact that your peat (carbon) will eventually combine with the nitrogen in your soil and produce compost.

This is why I like top dressing with compost as opposed to incorporating it within the soil itself. Eventually, the soil itself will become compost. And, if you want a long no-till soil bed then you need to account for the fact that the peat moss will eventually become compost. Because most of us do not have access to EWC that are capable of providing life, nutrition, and soil texture/consistency.

This is why many no-till grows will turn into ROLS after the 1 year mark.


I agree, not all composts are created equal lol...
110%. Eager to have my own worm farm on the level of yours. To be able to feed with nothing but worm castings? That is living soil mastery, as far as I can tell.

This man has an epic EWC thread, wish I could find it.








Fact is guys that the more one takes control out of one's own hands, and takes a step back allowing things to work as they were designed to do, the greater your end results will be. I find a great deal of symbolism in the fact that the humble little earthworm does so much to create a perfect living soil, especially when one considers that we too shall eventually become the food of the humble little earthworm when we're all 6ft deep. Dust to dust.
 

lakesidegrower

Well-Known Member
This is great info, I was planning to try a 1:1:1 no till mix with very similar amendments as above, but these posts are making me want to lean towards the 40/40/20 mix, pretty convincing argument.

I will be using store bought EWC for this mix but will be starting a worm box in the next couple of months with the goal of producing top quality castings with the right inputs.

Given the store bought ewc are probably not top quality, I’d like to amend the soil mix with quality compost. I have access to unlimited leaf compost/mould (forest as a backyard for the win!) - how would you guys suggest incorporating into my soil mix? Also plan to use the leaf mould as bedding for my worms, but it’ll obviously be a while before I see/can use the results.
 

youraveragehorticulturist

Well-Known Member
Forest "humus" (the dark, crumbly well broken down, lower layer stuff) is like great, aged, ready to go compost. You can mix it into your soil, use it like top dress or mulch top layer. Little twigs and sticks and things are OK. They help with the structure and texture of your soil mix.

Leave mould is great stuff too. If it has the right texture (somewhere between bits of leaves and compost) you can use it as part of the peat moss portion of your soil.

Crumbling, rotting wood chunks are awesome mixed in for areation. They hold air and water in the soil, they provide fungus and bacteria from the woods and work as a home for more microbes. Big chunks also prevent compaction and help the soil structure

The best part is that these ingredients are like 100% top quality and ready to go right now.
 

lakesidegrower

Well-Known Member
I'm stoked lol there is so much satisfaction in sourcing this stuff in nature (for free!)
We have about 20" of snow cover right now, but wanted to mix my soil in the next couple of weeks so I can have it ready for spring outdoor grow season - do you think I could forage the leaf compost.mould and rotted wood while its frozen? I would imagine it isn't as biodiverse in the winter time as int he summer months...
 

RenaissanceBrah

Active Member
This. 100%.

Consider the typical role people think compost has, and the role that it can have.

People tend to mistakenly believe that the primary role of compost is to provide life to a soil, when in reality the ultimate purpose of a compost should be to provide life and nutrition to a soil.

If your EWC has both life and nutrition in it, you can feed the plants with absolutely nothing but EWC and even compost for that matter. The issue is that many corporations, and many of us for that matter, tend to feed worms vegetable scraps and paper. Just like with a human, eating scraps will technically produce life, but will it produce nutrition as well?

By feeding your normal plant's top dress to your worms instead, you can produce castings capable of providing what the top dress does but on steroids.

This is where Coots' EWC comes into play. Because not only do you have the above, but you also have the texture/consistency of fresh EWC. This is why Coots can have 1/3 compost in his soil mix, because his EWC are light, airy, and fluffy. The texture/consistency of EWC on his level are absolutely nothing in comparison to that of typical compost one comes across; clumpy, not fully decomposed, and lacking that sweet earthy musk that is capable of producing a high within itself.

Since many of us, (myself included) do not have access to this quality of EWC/compost, it is best to go with 40% peat/40% aeration/20% compost. This is because, unless you have the highest quality compost (as in, properly homemade) then you will do more harm than good following Coots' 1:1:1 ratio.

Without having light, airy, fluffy, and nutritious compost then following the 1:1:1 ratio is more likely to result in rapid advancement of soil compaction, dry spots in the soil, poor soil texture/consistency, and by proxy mediocre growth at best. Even worse is when you attempt to do a no-till, because you cannot forget that the peat moss in your no-till soil will eventually combine with the organic inputs to become compost. The 40/40/20 ratio I use takes this into consideration

This is why most people cannot make no-till last long, they do not account for soil compaction. Soil compaction will fuck all of us, its inevitable, however it can be delayed if the above is taken into consideration. Not just the extra aeration/drainage, but the fact that your peat (carbon) will eventually combine with the nitrogen in your soil and produce compost.

This is why I like top dressing with compost as opposed to incorporating it within the soil itself. Eventually, the soil itself will become compost. And, if you want a long no-till soil bed then you need to account for the fact that the peat moss will eventually become compost. Because most of us do not have access to EWC that are capable of providing life, nutrition, and soil texture/consistency.

This is why many no-till grows will turn into ROLS after the 1 year mark.




110%. Eager to have my own worm farm on the level of yours. To be able to feed with nothing but worm castings? That is living soil mastery, as far as I can tell.

This man has an epic EWC thread, wish I could find it.








Fact is guys that the more one takes control out of one's own hands, and takes a step back allowing things to work as they were designed to do, the greater your end results will be. I find a great deal of symbolism in the fact that the humble little earthworm does so much to create a perfect living soil, especially when one considers that we too shall eventually become the food of the humble little earthworm when we're all 6ft deep. Dust to dust.
Thanks for that Kratos, that is some really good info, I learned something important today.

In my current 30 gallon no-till pots (I have 3) I did use the 1/1/1 base mix, with Bu's Blend biodynamic compost. Would you consider that compost high quality enough to run the 1/1/1 ratio?

For my worm bin at home I always fed 100% organic food scraps, I'm a stickler for that kind of stuff, never used anything non-organic, also never put in paper or anything like that. Things like broccoli stalks, asparagus stalks, a bit of coffee grounds, ground up eggshells, etc...

Ideally I do want to keep it as simple as possible, and just top dress with worm castings. Anything else I should be feeding my worms to achieve such nutritious EWC?
 

kratos015

Well-Known Member
This is great info, I was planning to try a 1:1:1 no till mix with very similar amendments as above, but these posts are making me want to lean towards the 40/40/20 mix, pretty convincing argument.

I will be using store bought EWC for this mix but will be starting a worm box in the next couple of months with the goal of producing top quality castings with the right inputs.

Given the store bought ewc are probably not top quality, I’d like to amend the soil mix with quality compost. I have access to unlimited leaf compost/mould (forest as a backyard for the win!) - how would you guys suggest incorporating into my soil mix? Also plan to use the leaf mould as bedding for my worms, but it’ll obviously be a while before I see/can use the results.
Jealous of your leaf mould access! Unfortunately, I'm not qualified to comment having never had the opportunity to use the stuff since I live in the middle of the desert. I have heard absolutely nothing but good things, especially when fed to worms. If I recall, Coot's feeds his worms leaf mould, OSF for grit, and Crab/Neem/Kelp meals. Having access to that kind of quality EWC will make literally anything you grow unstoppable.


Thanks for that Kratos, that is some really good info, I learned something important today.

In my current 30 gallon no-till pots (I have 3) I did use the 1/1/1 base mix, with Bu's Blend biodynamic compost. Would you consider that compost high quality enough to run the 1/1/1 ratio?

For my worm bin at home I always fed 100% organic food scraps, I'm a stickler for that kind of stuff, never used anything non-organic, also never put in paper or anything like that. Things like broccoli stalks, asparagus stalks, a bit of coffee grounds, ground up eggshells, etc...

Ideally I do want to keep it as simple as possible, and just top dress with worm castings. Anything else I should be feeding my worms to achieve such nutritious EWC?
I've no experience with the Bu's Blend (Malibu Compost, right?) but I've heard amazing things about it, and Coast of Maine products. However, the unfortunate reality is that by not doing things ourselves we are putting ourselves at the mercy of the people responsible for processing the product. The bottom line is that these companies are a business, and profits come before anything else.

You'll know immediately if the 1:1:1 ratio is causing you problems if you attempt to run no-till. You'll get good results the first time, but the next couple times won't yield as good as the first time due to soil compaction/clumping.

Try to think of our responsibility as growing roots, not plants.

This perspective will help you realize the importance of not loading up your no-till mix with mediocre compost. If our plants are only as good as their roots, and our plant's roots are unable to move freely through the soil mix, our plants will suck.

On paper, the extra 7% perlite and peat moss doesn't seem like much at all. But, once you're done mixing it and you run your hands through it you will know immediately. Then, you can imagine how your roots will feel when they are attempting to grow through this soil mix.

Organic food scraps are good, don't get me wrong. They'll produce EWC that will bring plenty of life to your soil. Properly cultivated, composted, and sifted EWC will also provide quality soil texture. What food scraps typically will not provide, however is nutrition. Coffee grounds are a good source of Nitrogen, sure, but the coffee grounds and eggshell's main purpose in a worm bin is for grit and not nutrition.

The exception to the food scraps not providing nutrition statement I made would be if you grew the food scraps yourself.

Take lettuce/leafy greens from a grocery store for instance. They are almost always grown hydroponically, so they're pretty much just full of water and that's about it.

Lettuce/greens grown in the soil we all try to cultivate is significantly different compared to store bought greens, even ones from the "organic" section. If you taste lettuce grown in soil that we all post about on here, you will notice multiple different things.

For one, the greens themselves will be more "dense" due to the fact they're grown in soil and not hydroponically. They'll also have flavor to them, believe it or not. As well as both a nutritional content and even mineral content from the soil that they were grown in.





Forgive the book, but I guess the tl;dr of it would be that veggie/food scraps are only worthless if they are store bought due to the commercial growing methods used to cultivate them. If the food scraps are from your own garden/homestead AND you know what's in them and how they were produced, they will provide nutritional content to your compost. Again, its just like us.

This is my biggest reason for talking about living soil so much. Not only because I received all of this information freely, but because we are so used to commercially produced garbage that we don't even know it is garbage until we produce our own product.
 

lakesidegrower

Well-Known Member
This is my biggest reason for talking about living soil so much. Not only because I received all of this information freely, but because we are so used to commercially produced garbage that we don't even know it is garbage until we produce our own product.
Love this - my mind has been blown this past week having spent hours digging into organic gardening.
The 1:1:1 mix with the few amendments you posted above; this would be a more bacterially dominant soil im presuming?
 

kratos015

Well-Known Member
Love this - my mind has been blown this past week having spent hours digging into organic gardening.
The 1:1:1 mix with the few amendments you posted above; this would be a more bacterially dominant soil im presuming?
Correct.

However, from what I've understood most plants prefer a bacteria dominant soil as opposed to a fungi dominated one.

This is nothing we should be concerned about as growers though. This is because, acidic conditions tend to breed fungi dominated soil where as neutral/alkaline conditions tends to breed bacterial dominated soils.

Cannabis does not do good in a fungi dominated soil, much like azaleas and blueberries don't do well in a bacteria dominated soil. This is because a fungi dominated soil tends to be more acidic, and vice versa with bacteria dominated soils. They're closely intertwined with one another, if that makes sense.

I have a bad habit of saying things that only make sense in my head sometimes.
 

lakesidegrower

Well-Known Member
Correct.

However, from what I've understood most plants prefer a bacteria dominant soil as opposed to a fungi dominated one.

This is nothing we should be concerned about as growers though. This is because, acidic conditions tend to breed fungi dominated soil where as neutral/alkaline conditions tends to breed bacterial dominated soils.

Cannabis does not do good in a fungi dominated soil, much like azaleas and blueberries don't do well in a bacteria dominated soil. This is because a fungi dominated soil tends to be more acidic, and vice versa with bacteria dominated soils. They're closely intertwined with one another, if that makes sense.

I have a bad habit of saying things that only make sense in my head sometimes.
Yup definitely makes sense / I’ve come to understand that I’d be wanting to create a bacteria dominant soil, so does this mean I should avoid inputs that would encourage fungal growth? For example, I was considering adding decomposed/rotted wood material which I believe would likely contain fungus, in addition to other microorganisms - should I avoid this kind of input to avoid throwing off the bacterial dominance?
 

RenaissanceBrah

Active Member
Jealous of your leaf mould access! Unfortunately, I'm not qualified to comment having never had the opportunity to use the stuff since I live in the middle of the desert. I have heard absolutely nothing but good things, especially when fed to worms. If I recall, Coot's feeds his worms leaf mould, OSF for grit, and Crab/Neem/Kelp meals. Having access to that kind of quality EWC will make literally anything you grow unstoppable.




I've no experience with the Bu's Blend (Malibu Compost, right?) but I've heard amazing things about it, and Coast of Maine products. However, the unfortunate reality is that by not doing things ourselves we are putting ourselves at the mercy of the people responsible for processing the product. The bottom line is that these companies are a business, and profits come before anything else.

You'll know immediately if the 1:1:1 ratio is causing you problems if you attempt to run no-till. You'll get good results the first time, but the next couple times won't yield as good as the first time due to soil compaction/clumping.

Try to think of our responsibility as growing roots, not plants.

This perspective will help you realize the importance of not loading up your no-till mix with mediocre compost. If our plants are only as good as their roots, and our plant's roots are unable to move freely through the soil mix, our plants will suck.

On paper, the extra 7% perlite and peat moss doesn't seem like much at all. But, once you're done mixing it and you run your hands through it you will know immediately. Then, you can imagine how your roots will feel when they are attempting to grow through this soil mix.

Organic food scraps are good, don't get me wrong. They'll produce EWC that will bring plenty of life to your soil. Properly cultivated, composted, and sifted EWC will also provide quality soil texture. What food scraps typically will not provide, however is nutrition. Coffee grounds are a good source of Nitrogen, sure, but the coffee grounds and eggshell's main purpose in a worm bin is for grit and not nutrition.

The exception to the food scraps not providing nutrition statement I made would be if you grew the food scraps yourself.

Take lettuce/leafy greens from a grocery store for instance. They are almost always grown hydroponically, so they're pretty much just full of water and that's about it.

Lettuce/greens grown in the soil we all try to cultivate is significantly different compared to store bought greens, even ones from the "organic" section. If you taste lettuce grown in soil that we all post about on here, you will notice multiple different things.

For one, the greens themselves will be more "dense" due to the fact they're grown in soil and not hydroponically. They'll also have flavor to them, believe it or not. As well as both a nutritional content and even mineral content from the soil that they were grown in.





Forgive the book, but I guess the tl;dr of it would be that veggie/food scraps are only worthless if they are store bought due to the commercial growing methods used to cultivate them. If the food scraps are from your own garden/homestead AND you know what's in them and how they were produced, they will provide nutritional content to your compost. Again, its just like us.

This is my biggest reason for talking about living soil so much. Not only because I received all of this information freely, but because we are so used to commercially produced garbage that we don't even know it is garbage until we produce our own product.
Wow thank you for this, I don't mind the longer post at all, as a matter of fact I highly appreciate it, even read through it a few times to really grasp all the information.

In that case, I'll start using the 40/40/20 of peat/pumice/compost, to avoid soil compaction, I didn't consider that. My worm compost is pretty fluffy, it has a peat base. The Bu's Blend is from what I remember kinda fluffy? I can't recall exactly, but going to be buying more soon.

Regarding organics from the grocery store, makes sense - I do buy my food from a well respected organics store, but I imagine some (or all) of the stuff will be grown hydroponically. That being said, I have a large amount of crab and kelp meal on hand, so I'll begin feeding that to my worms, and about to order some stuff from buildasoil, so going to pick up some Oyster Shell Flour as well :)

Any specific amounts to feed the worms the kelp/crab/oyster flours? (I try to avoid using neem).
 

kratos015

Well-Known Member
Yup definitely makes sense / I’ve come to understand that I’d be wanting to create a bacteria dominant soil, so does this mean I should avoid inputs that would encourage fungal growth? For example, I was considering adding decomposed/rotted wood material which I believe would likely contain fungus, in addition to other microorganisms - should I avoid this kind of input to avoid throwing off the bacterial dominance?
No sir.

A source with some quotes before I go on, if I may.

"Even though a high proportion of both fungi and bacteria are decomposers in the soil, they degrade plant residues differently and have different roles in the recycling of nutrients. This is partly due to their different choice of habitats within the soil and the different types of organic matter they consume."

"The fungal population will increase at a greater rate than that of bacteria"



Consider aerobic and anaerobic bacteria.

For those that may not know, the two forms of bacteria one will encounter in organics will be aerobic or anaerobic as mentioned above. Aerobic bacteria can only exist in oxygenated conditions, and anaerobic only in conditions with zero oxygen.

Why is this important? Because all of our soil has anaerobic bacteria in it, in conjunction with the aerobic bacteria. The aerobic bacteria is just the more dominant culture, the lesser dominant culture (anaerobic bacteria) still very much exists.. it just doesn't have enough dominance to have any influence on the soil/situation.

The same is true of fungi and bacteria within a living soil, it is just a matter of which one is more dominant. They both exist within the soil, but only one can be dominant. I guess the point I'm trying to make, is that do answer your question don't "avoid" specific things/inputs to control the bacteria/fungi growth. You won't throw off the bacterial dominance, because it isn't just related to organic inputs solely. It is also related to soil conditions, soil texture and pH, the plant that is being grown in said soil, and so much more.

Effectively, the plant in conjunction with the soil is collaborating with one another in symbiosis that will ensure that they both not only survive but achieve optimal survival conditions.

Incidentally, pH plays a large factor as to whether or not your soil will be bacterial or fungal dominant. More sources here and here.

"In conclusion, this study showed that neutral or slightly alkaline conditions favored bacterial growth. Conversely, an acid pH favored fungal growth."

"Bacterial growth was highest at the highest pH values of the gradient and declined by a factor of 5 toward the lower pH values. In contrast, fungal growth was maximal at pH 4.5, and decreased by a factor of more than 5 toward the high pH end."

Acidic soil conditions = fungal dominant
Neutral and above = bacterial dominant

This is why I mentioned Blueberries and Azaleas earlier, because they literally will not grow in the living soil we use for cannabis and most other plants. Fungi is most natural in an acidic soil, bacteria in neutral or above.

tl;dr: Organic inputs will not be the determining factor of the bacteria:fungi ratio, pH will be.


Wow thank you for this, I don't mind the longer post at all, as a matter of fact I highly appreciate it, even read through it a few times to really grasp all the information.

In that case, I'll start using the 40/40/20 of peat/pumice/compost, to avoid soil compaction, I didn't consider that. My worm compost is pretty fluffy, it has a peat base. The Bu's Blend is from what I remember kinda fluffy? I can't recall exactly, but going to be buying more soon.

Regarding organics from the grocery store, makes sense - I do buy my food from a well respected organics store, but I imagine some (or all) of the stuff will be grown hydroponically. That being said, I have a large amount of crab and kelp meal on hand, so I'll begin feeding that to my worms, and about to order some stuff from buildasoil, so going to pick up some Oyster Shell Flour as well :)

Any specific amounts to feed the worms the kelp/crab/oyster flours? (I try to avoid using neem).

Glad to be of service. Of course, everyone's mileage will vary, but this mix has provided me with much better results than the 1:1:1 ratio and I contribute it mainly to soil compaction. I'm certainly no expert, however there's something that has stood out to me in terms of knowledge/education of soil.

I feel that too much information is centered towards the content of soil, but there isn't enough about soil texture and as a result, compaction.

Compaction will be the natural and inevitable result of any no-till.

By accounting for compaction, we increase the amount of time we can continue our no-till before they become the compost that will become part of your next no-till soil.

The best soil you'll ever have, is soil that consists of the compost that was the result of your last no-till. When your no-till becomes nothing but compost and perlite, and you mix it with new peat moss and more perlite? Incredible.



I used to make a mix of the crab/neem that I would sprinkle just enough to cover the veggie/food scraps/compost in the worm bin. Then, I would liberally sprinkle the coffee grounds+OSF for grit over the top of the scraps/crab/neem mix.

There a reason you avoid neem, if you don't mind me asking? Makes worms go apeshit, but it definitely isn't mandatory.
 
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