Calling Out The Organic Growing Machines

  • Thread starter oldskol4evr
  • Start date
  • Tagged users None
Organikz

Organikz

3,562
263
I feel that everyone should try mushrooms for LSD at some point in their life. It is an extremely mind opening experience and you cannot describe it to a person that has never done it. They look at you like you're crazy

I was trying to explain to my girlfriend how grow visuals work. She didn't have a clue what I was trying to say but I love those visuals. Looks like trees are growing at you
 
Last edited:
GT21

GT21

I like soup
Supporter
10,114
438
I feel that everyone should try mushrooms for LSD at some point in their life. It is an extremely mind opening experience and you cannot describe it to a person that has never done it. They look at you like you're crazy

I was trying to explain to my girlfriend how grow visuals work. She didn't have a clue what I was trying to say but I love those visuals. Looks like trees are growing at you
I dont mess with it anymore... i eat too many and feel like im dying. Dont smoke them either.... youll be up at 3am taking your microwave apart
 
Ecompost

Ecompost

5,134
313
Can you send some my way!
yes mate I can for a price of course. The honey we have now is mostly based on thyme since this is the dominant flower at this time. In the next few weeks we will begin to get honey from Nispero, Orange, Borage, Phacellia, Thyme, Rosemary and so on. We have hives in the relevant locations so collect about 5 different types across the year with my own personal favorite being the Nispero honey and that from the Black Locust Blossom, usually ready around May in any given year
 
GreenHawk

GreenHawk

36
33
Hey all,
I've recently read Teaming with Microbes and I am hooked like a nematode by a fungi! So I am trying to find ratios of each ingredient when making a no till, raised bed super soil for greenhouse grow. I'm looking for info like 3% of Biochar, a bag of (whatever) per x Cubic yard(s), etc. I need quite a few cubic yards worth of finished soil so any numbers/ratios that can simplify my equation would be awesome!

Also I'm trying to catch up on this forum, but lets face it, there is a ton of information buried in here. Is it possible for people to post links to the most informational posts, or do a quick recap on the big points of no till raised beds? I'm sure there are some specific issues to look out for when it comes to growing in a greenhouse. Anyone with knowledge or experience on these issues?
Thanks a bunch everyone.
 
GreenHawk

GreenHawk

36
33
Also, when starting out with a super soil, will it benefit me much to mix in a bacteria dominant mulch, or will that just tie up nuts? I know I will be using bacteria dom teas and protozoa soups. Will that be enough?
 
Ecompost

Ecompost

5,134
313
Hey all,
I've recently read Teaming with Microbes and I am hooked like a nematode by a fungi! So I am trying to find ratios of each ingredient when making a no till, raised bed super soil for greenhouse grow. I'm looking for info like 3% of Biochar, a bag of (whatever) per x Cubic yard(s), etc. I need quite a few cubic yards worth of finished soil so any numbers/ratios that can simplify my equation would be awesome!

Also I'm trying to catch up on this forum, but lets face it, there is a ton of information buried in here. Is it possible for people to post links to the most informational posts, or do a quick recap on the big points of no till raised beds? I'm sure there are some specific issues to look out for when it comes to growing in a greenhouse. Anyone with knowledge or experience on these issues?
Thanks a bunch everyone.
Mycorrhiza fungi and Bio Char in an annual greenhouse test, watch this bro.
Learn about cover crops, companion planting, know each time you add something, you change the ratio of biology, this might be temporary or not.

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167779914001504
 
GreenHawk

GreenHawk

36
33
Thank you for the info. That presentation was informative. I like her ending thesis that over time it may become a beneficial relationship between biochar and mycorrhiza, but in the short run it can cause yield loses.
I saw your post a little while ago about the companion plants you use and i have already made note of them. I was already planning to use clover, but didn't think/know about the others. Has anyone tried growing mint along with their plants?
 
GreenHawk

GreenHawk

36
33
The concept I got from Teaming with Microbes was that you can manipulate the cycling of nutrients. Say that you are about to start requiring more phosphate for flowering, you can use a bacteria dom tea, then at next watering you add a protozoa soup in with the next batch. The protozoa help cycle the locked up nuts in the bacteria, then when bacteria numbers start to dip the protozoa will eat other predators of bacteria, eventually allowing the bacteria to build back up.
Is my understanding correct?
 
Ecompost

Ecompost

5,134
313
Thank you for the info. That presentation was informative. I like her ending thesis that over time it may become a beneficial relationship between biochar and mycorrhiza, but in the short run it can cause yield loses.
I saw your post a little while ago about the companion plants you use and i have already made note of them. I was already planning to use clover, but didn't think/know about the others. Has anyone tried growing mint along with their plants?
mint will grow well too :-)
 
Top Bottom