How do you remove plants from living soil no till

Hollatchaboy

Well-Known Member
I'll jump with a question:

Thoughts on doing it in a 10gal pot? I've read than 15gal is minimum for no-till.
But i have a 10gal pot that i removed the plant from, sowed some barley seed and keep watering it.

You think i will be able to put another seed or plant in a few weeks when rootball can be easily removed? Or better do some ROLS style and remix again the soil?
Jeremy at bas is doing it in 5 gallon pots right now. I personally wouldn't do it. It's a constant battle with feeding. Larger volumes of soil are harder to deplete, making cycling easier and better.
 

ooof-da

Well-Known Member
With no till, you just want to keep a decaying layer at the soil surface. It keeps cycling in nutrients. I use cover crop for the N fixing, nutrients and enzymes. I use craft blend for everything else the cover crop doesn't cover. Lol
With no till, you just want to keep a decaying layer at the soil surface. It keeps cycling in nutrients. I use cover crop for the N fixing, nutrients and enzymes. I use craft blend for everything else the cover crop doesn't cover. Lol
thatabout covers it. :)
 

Hollatchaboy

Well-Known Member
I think he works in grow facility and has such a wealth of information it just oozes out in spurts
If this is the kind of shit they do in grow facilities, then I don't want any part of what they sell. It's not funny, but the dispos by me, the buds are never frosty. It's like they take all the trichomes for concentrates, and sell the bud without trichomes.
 

Hollatchaboy

Well-Known Member
I think that’s what I’m taking away from the majority that’s the the route I’m going to take cut plant down let stalk sit. For a while and build my soil up for about a month and reuse thanks
Look to nature for answers. A stalk in nature would just decompose back into the earth, feeding the next round of plant life.
 
Top