Here's a clip on Terra Preta for those who don't know about it yet, and for others like myself who can't get enough info about it. Take the ten minutes, it's worth it for any gardener to hear.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-hSl59ET2A&feature=related
This is the basis of my recycled soil. My aim is to create a soil that needs very little of anything added to it. Why? I'm cheap, and I'm lazy.
I use char, ocean products, and rockdusts to amend my soil. These are the dry ingredients.
Then there's the 'living' ingredients: EM, compost, castings, compost teas, lacto bacillus brews.
Apart from EM, and tea ingredients which both go a very long way, I have stopped spending money on my garden.
Many smokers who wind up growing weed get interested in other plants and next thing you know the yards being converted to veggie patches and fruit trees are being planted all over. Such is my case, and it can get really spendy if your soil is crap. I've spent plenty on lime and gypsum and blood and bone and more trying to fix the crap compact yellow clay soil but it has been an uphill battle and costly, in labour and cash. Poor performing plants, high maintenance gardening.
Recycling isn't just about saving the planet, that's a nice bonus, but it'll also save you bucks.
So here's my cost cutting tip for starters. I'll fill in details of things as I progress into the thread.
Bludging free stuff.
If you haven't got trees to prune bludge some untreated pallets, or other form of untreated wood, there's wood to be found if you look around. Char that stuff and get it in your compost heap. If it's for a grow and you want it quick, you can smash it up fine, pour in kelp and high N fert with water for a few days, (I add EM here as it's likely anaerobic - so why not) and then mix in castings compost etc, mix and rest it for a couple weeks... it's goodness.
Bludge rock dusts from sweepings in yards at landscapers or quarries, some quarries practically give it away by the ton. Jewellers who carve rocks have a nice mix of very fine dusts. Use sense and use a dust mask, with char and rock dusts. Pulverise your own if you're feeling hard.
Compost sources are many. Cafe wastes, grocery stores, produce stores and markets, restaurants, stables etc etc, your household wastes including most paper goods and foodstuffs.
My soil like many soils is severely depleted. The addition of run of the mill garden products and compost coming from plants in depleted soil was not making much headway at all. I was paying and working for every 'organic veggie' I ate. And I'm cheap and lazy, I almost felt like giving up, in fact I did at one stage, and made a greenhouse to grow in instead...
So - "my lazy cheapass guide to DIY veggies and herbs and healing crappy soil and stuff by installment" that's what this thread'll be.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-hSl59ET2A&feature=related
This is the basis of my recycled soil. My aim is to create a soil that needs very little of anything added to it. Why? I'm cheap, and I'm lazy.
I use char, ocean products, and rockdusts to amend my soil. These are the dry ingredients.
Then there's the 'living' ingredients: EM, compost, castings, compost teas, lacto bacillus brews.
Apart from EM, and tea ingredients which both go a very long way, I have stopped spending money on my garden.
Many smokers who wind up growing weed get interested in other plants and next thing you know the yards being converted to veggie patches and fruit trees are being planted all over. Such is my case, and it can get really spendy if your soil is crap. I've spent plenty on lime and gypsum and blood and bone and more trying to fix the crap compact yellow clay soil but it has been an uphill battle and costly, in labour and cash. Poor performing plants, high maintenance gardening.
Recycling isn't just about saving the planet, that's a nice bonus, but it'll also save you bucks.
So here's my cost cutting tip for starters. I'll fill in details of things as I progress into the thread.
Bludging free stuff.
If you haven't got trees to prune bludge some untreated pallets, or other form of untreated wood, there's wood to be found if you look around. Char that stuff and get it in your compost heap. If it's for a grow and you want it quick, you can smash it up fine, pour in kelp and high N fert with water for a few days, (I add EM here as it's likely anaerobic - so why not) and then mix in castings compost etc, mix and rest it for a couple weeks... it's goodness.
Bludge rock dusts from sweepings in yards at landscapers or quarries, some quarries practically give it away by the ton. Jewellers who carve rocks have a nice mix of very fine dusts. Use sense and use a dust mask, with char and rock dusts. Pulverise your own if you're feeling hard.
Compost sources are many. Cafe wastes, grocery stores, produce stores and markets, restaurants, stables etc etc, your household wastes including most paper goods and foodstuffs.
My soil like many soils is severely depleted. The addition of run of the mill garden products and compost coming from plants in depleted soil was not making much headway at all. I was paying and working for every 'organic veggie' I ate. And I'm cheap and lazy, I almost felt like giving up, in fact I did at one stage, and made a greenhouse to grow in instead...
So - "my lazy cheapass guide to DIY veggies and herbs and healing crappy soil and stuff by installment" that's what this thread'll be.