CrushnYuba
Well-known member
I have great respect for the Hawaiian biome and the ganga produced there. I have often wondered about the lava rock which forms a base for all soils there. I used to find ornamental lava rock for free on Craigslist and crush it. Put a layer down on your cement driveway and then put a piece of plywood on top. Run your car over it everytime you pull into the driveway.
Much easier, buy lava rock crushed down to the size you want.
It is heavier than perlite, but in no-tills who cares?
Your proposed simple mix is almost there, as others have mentioned, add a few more amendments and you're there.
But you already know this stuff if you used CC's suggestions for your no-till soil...
I think it would be the opposite. In no till, i think some of the benefits you get from lava rock over perlite don't matter much.
I make my soil mixes 1/3 drainage material.
I like about 15% lava rock and 15% perlite. It is significantly heavier then perlite. It holds less air. It doesn't float when hand watered (because it holds less air). And it doesn't crush. It lasts longer. But if you aren't tilling, you probably won't be crushing perlite as much. It will also pack in a bit and be less likely to float with no till.
I have used it exclusively in mixes with no perlite. Perlite does perform a bit better. But it does nothing crushed to dust or floating away.
All the local landscaping and soil yards carry it for about 50$ a yard. The small perlite is about 90$ a yard. The chunky perlite is more.
They have it in 2 different sizes. A big one that is for decorative landscaping and the small one that is used in soil. It's a little bigger then the good perlite.
A cubic yard is 200 gallons. I have only seen it bagged once or twice like perlite.