Rasta Roy
Well-Known Member
So I've been growing for about five years, and recently switched to growing organically. I've mostly been doing compost teas and top dressings but for this next round I'm doing some soil mix experiments trying narrow in on a technique and I'm wondering if anyone has any insight. So I know the benefit of organic, is the plant will take what it needs. But I'm a little unsure how that works when it comes to faster breaking down guano vs slower breaking down bone meal. Will the guano get used up quicker since it breaks down faster? Or will it remain just as long as the bone meal because the plant will just use it up as it needs it?
I'm growing ten plants for my test.
My soil mix is the same for them both. Locally sourced compost (Hammond Farms in mid Michigan is the shit!), perlite, and vermiculite, worm castings, Kelp meal, Azomite, greensand, Gypsum.
The difference is six of them also have blood, and bone meal. While the other four are Mexican and Indonesian bat guano.
I'm super excited to see how this turns out and will post my progress just wondering about anyone else's experience!
I'm growing ten plants for my test.
My soil mix is the same for them both. Locally sourced compost (Hammond Farms in mid Michigan is the shit!), perlite, and vermiculite, worm castings, Kelp meal, Azomite, greensand, Gypsum.
The difference is six of them also have blood, and bone meal. While the other four are Mexican and Indonesian bat guano.
I'm super excited to see how this turns out and will post my progress just wondering about anyone else's experience!