freebird919
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- Apr 13, 2026
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Do this and you get this w/no to little nutes. Still have to see later in grow. It’s my first of this kind.Ok, I never do this but y’all have been more than kind. Of coarse you can find most of this anywhere on the net but I think I have a few secrets to add.
Ingredients: soil from undisturbed woodlands (get as much as you can). Soil with thick rotted leaves and bark. If you sink into it while walking, you found it. You can also find businesses to deliver but carefully inspect and ask questions about where obtained and investigate and verify. Huge amounts of coffee grounds (your own, friends & family then truckloads (in time) from Starbucks, and others). Seek out farmer granting you aged manure (just about any, rabbit, hoarse, cow and pig). Yours, family & friends appropriate kitchen clean veg waste (any others from yard and garden) adding always! Huge amounts of maple leaves chopped, weed whipped or otherwise (or other leaves but NOT oak). Old wood chips (just enough to add brown). Some branches (to add oxygen in). Turn it all regularly for a month or two then add gallons of worms (red and nightcrawlers). Water when extremely dry (worms need it to breathe). Keep turning without too much disturbance to worms (they’re eating, pooping and breading). Add any ingredients of plant life rotten or otherwise, bone meal, blood meal, black cow (these found “on sale”) tea bags, pig bread (obtained from bakery discard) & etc. The more differing ingredient type (diversification) the better. Time, heat, rain.
My piles are so large they’d take a large backhoe to turn but that’s the worms job, for the most part now. When done this way, or better, you have SUPER SOIL (my way) and in any amount you choose. And I could tell you but you’d think I’m exaggerating how big my plants get and how they produce. It’s real. This is one case where bigger is better, if you can, or find a friend or family member where you can pile and experiment. Edit: Biochar, my woods usually need cleaning and hardwood branches and some trees are burnt leaving some small burnt chips. Add them in with small amounts to the turning and you’ve just added biochar.
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