cpknerr on Nostr: I wanted to share a little on the potting soil we use for the plants in our #nursery: ...
I wanted to share a little on the potting soil we use for the plants in our #nursery:
What we are looking for is a medium that drains easily, yet retains moisture. The cost is also a factor.
Since we pot mostly perennials, I also am looking for a fungally dominant potting mix vs. bacterially dominant as you'd have with fresh compost.
Wood chips around here are easy to get by the truckload, and I use well rotted ones for the basis of my compost mix. And by "rotted" I mean "rotted": They look like soil and are completely broken down by fungus, it takes about 2-3 years.
On top of the wood chips I add about 5% by volume charged biochar. About half of this is sifted to 1/4" + and the other half of the biochar is right out of the leaf vacuum I use to crush it up. The biochar is charged with azomite, sea minerals, worm casts, and effective microorganisms (EM-1). We make the biochar right here on the farm. It serves both to provide and retain nutrients and moisture as well as provide drainage:
Then worm castings sifted to 1/8" and finer at around 5% by volume. I also raise the worms for the casts, the current system involves growing them in 4'x8' Waste Management Bagsters:
Finally about 1 quart of activated EM-1. This is 1 oz Terraganix EM-1 mixed with 1 oz blackstrap molasses in 30 oz of water:
This all gets mixed up by hand, and then we use it to pot our plants.
I mix it in a gorilla cart which will provide enough for about 25-30 trade gallon pots.
#grownostr #permaculture #fungi #plantstr #garden
Published at
2024-07-11 22:03:06Event JSON
{
"id": "68e3029008471dc6d4687f8e14e0a4db5ab1af15cb702ee280c4d5609bc8b655",
"pubkey": "4b1804c90d59dff195ee0e8f692b98a7c762bf1793b3e126c546d730dcb04477",
"created_at": 1720735386,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"t",
"nursery"
],
[
"t",
"grownostr"
],
[
"t",
"permaculture"
],
[
"t",
"fungi"
],
[
"t",
"plantstr"
],
[
"t",
"garden"
]
],
"content": "I wanted to share a little on the potting soil we use for the plants in our #nursery:\n\nhttps://m.primal.net/JNQL.jpg \n\nWhat we are looking for is a medium that drains easily, yet retains moisture. The cost is also a factor. \n\nSince we pot mostly perennials, I also am looking for a fungally dominant potting mix vs. bacterially dominant as you'd have with fresh compost.\n\nWood chips around here are easy to get by the truckload, and I use well rotted ones for the basis of my compost mix. And by \"rotted\" I mean \"rotted\": They look like soil and are completely broken down by fungus, it takes about 2-3 years.\n\nhttps://m.primal.net/JNPw.jpg \n\nOn top of the wood chips I add about 5% by volume charged biochar. About half of this is sifted to 1/4\" + and the other half of the biochar is right out of the leaf vacuum I use to crush it up. The biochar is charged with azomite, sea minerals, worm casts, and effective microorganisms (EM-1). We make the biochar right here on the farm. It serves both to provide and retain nutrients and moisture as well as provide drainage:\n\nhttps://m.primal.net/JNPy.jpg \n\nThen worm castings sifted to 1/8\" and finer at around 5% by volume. I also raise the worms for the casts, the current system involves growing them in 4'x8' Waste Management Bagsters:\n\nhttps://m.primal.net/JNQB.jpg \n\nFinally about 1 quart of activated EM-1. This is 1 oz Terraganix EM-1 mixed with 1 oz blackstrap molasses in 30 oz of water:\n\nhttps://m.primal.net/JNQG.jpg \n\nThis all gets mixed up by hand, and then we use it to pot our plants. \n\nI mix it in a gorilla cart which will provide enough for about 25-30 trade gallon pots. \n\n#grownostr #permaculture #fungi #plantstr #garden",
"sig": "cab65dbb930470f957367bc6de9b17b21421aa30bfb6aa34c1043c011b6812f50e3b807b1ed1f71606afbc7552863631e2fb018ceb67db56a2fcd945d602e823"
}