Free CO2 with Living Soil

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
You are not understanding, this isn't decomposition only and I don't top dress. I have 81% calcium saturation mostly in the form of calcium carbonate. The peat is oxidizing but the calcium is freeing up the carbon even more. Which is why my previous experiments were not producing the qtys I saw in my mix. I will be experiment more next month.
 
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NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
When a farmer limes a field, that co2 is given off from the soil right where a plant needs it, next to it's leaves throughout the growing season. Mine is just a more dynamic soil than most.
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
To each his own, but don't cheapen this by saying someone doesn't understand this simple concept.

Me, I build the soil for the plant. If I want CO2 I have two worm bins. The rest isn't something I'd mess with
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
To each his own, but don't cheapen this by saying someone doesn't understand this simple concept.

Me, I build the soil for the plant. If I want CO2 I have two worm bins. The rest isn't something I'd mess with
If it is so simple explain it to me pal? Why are you back here anyhow? Sound like the same troll to me. Back handed comments as you run with a tail between your legs. Stay lost this time.
 
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Rrog

Well-Known Member
Convention says active theromocomposting (enough to swing CO2) would by definition burn your shit. If your soil is hot enough to maintain an increased CO2 level AND your plants have not suffered N burn, then I owe you an apology.
It appears that no apology is due.

Moral of the story- Use the worm bin to create CO2
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
Certainly an appology was due, You were/are an ignorant troll who obviously has zero grasp on soil respiration let alone growing herb in soil. Do I care? Not a bit

Your macros in the soil should be good for about 50-100 ppm increase in a small room. You are golden dip shit.
Next time you feel the need to come back here, why don't you instead go outside and play hide and go fuck yourself.
 

meangreengrowinmachine

Well-Known Member
i really dont know about this worms and c02 business .... i have had worm farms indoors for years... albeit i have not been pushing them as far as how active they could possibly be, but one would think in a small space IF they are producing the amount of C02 that would make a difference in plant growth.. wouldn't that have been detrimental to my health and i would have had ill effects up to and including death due to over exposure to C02??
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
Soil respiration is something he doesn't understand which in itself is no big deal. Coming on here and talking shit about something he doesn't understand is his problem. Once a troll always a troll.
 

meangreengrowinmachine

Well-Known Member
this thing they are advertising in the video sounds pretty cool for a large scale organic farmer, but from what i have seen on these forums and others (granted i do not use c02) you need a much higher reading then what they are getting (unless they are not showing actual data and just tests).... at least that is to mimic artificial c02 introduction... as far as just trying to introduce c02 on an organic level this could possibly validate that... but they are trying to sell a product here..i am not saying you are wrong just that the video may be biased.. interesting stuff for sure!
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
this thing they are advertising in the video sounds pretty cool for a large scale organic farmer, but from what i have seen on these forums and others (granted i do not use c02) you need a much higher reading then what they are getting (unless they are not showing actual data and just tests).... at least that is to mimic artificial c02 introduction... as far as just trying to introduce c02 on an organic level this could possibly validate that... but they are trying to sell a product here..i am not saying you are wrong just that the video may be biased.. interesting stuff for sure!
Solvita is the worldwide leader on soil respiration. He is just selling the need for farmers to test it.

I already use CO2 from my soil only and have for over 6 months granted I am waning on production now but with only a month left on this run I am not worried. You should go back and read the thread. Peat + microbes + high Calcium Carbonate concentration = high co2 with the right ratios and water (low carbonates). Just sold my tank. Thats why the troll is here, he thinks I am a liar
 
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Rrog

Well-Known Member
Try the worm bin in the grow room. If you keep it a bit hot you'll measure CO2. It's constant, which you can do unless there's a plant in the compost (it'll be stunted in such hot Soil)

Measuring CO2 from your Ph leveling out isn't noteworthy. This thread is misleading.

I like how the little OP gets hyper when stressed. That'll ease as he matures
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
Measuring CO2 from your Ph leveling out isn't noteworthy. This thread is misleading.

You know what is really misleading? You hiding behind Siddhartha as you act like a fucking tool who has nothing to offer anyone here other than to try to save face. You are a fucking troll and nothing more as you have proved here from page one. I have never seen you offer anything here to anyone in the form of knowledge in the few months I have been around other than regurgitated BS that was already commented on. You are worthless as they come, but I'm sure deep down you already know that. What have you done in life? Seriously?
pH leveling out? You don't know shit and anyone with an IQ over 120 can read the things you have wrote on this thread and put two and two together.
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
GO away troll, your mothers vulva rolls need scrubbing. Here is something for you to chew on bitch. Maybe you can learn a few things while you are here trolling.

Soil pH and Buffer pH

Soil pH This is a measure of the soil acidity or alkalinity and is sometimes called the soil "water" pH. This is because it is a measure of the pH of the soil solution, which is considered the active pH that affects plant growth. Soil pH is the foundation of essentially all soil chemistry and nutrient reaction and should be the first consideration when evaluating a soil test. The total range of the pH scale is from 0 to 14. Values below the mid-point (pH 7.0) are acidic and those above pH 7.0 are alkaline. A soil pH of 7.0 is considered to be neutral. Most plants perform best in a soil that is slightly acid to neutral (pH 6.0 to 7.0). Some plants like blueberries require the soil to be more acid (pH 4.5 to 5.5), and others, like alfalfa will tolerate a slightly alkaline soil (pH 7.0-7.5).

The soil pH scale is logarithmic, meaning that each whole number is a factor of 10 larger or smaller than the ones next to it. For example if a soil has a pH of 6.5 and this pH is lowered to pH 5.5, the acid content of that soil is increased 10-fold. If the pH is lowered further to pH 4.5, the acid content becomes 100 times greater than at pH 6.5. The logarithmic nature of the pH scale means that small changes in a soil pH can have large effects on nutrient availability and plant growth.

Buffer pH (BpH) This is a value that is generated in the laboratory, it is not an existing feature of the soil. Laboratories perform this test in order to develop lime recommendations, and it actually has no other practical value.

In basic terms, the BpH is the resulting sample pH after the laboratory has added a liming material. In this test, the laboratory adds a chemical mixture called a buffering solution. This solution functions like extremely fast-acting lime. Each soil sample receives the same amount of buffering solution; therefore the resulting pH is different for each sample. To determine a lime recommendation, the laboratory looks at the difference between the original soil pH and the ending pH after the buffering solution has reacted with the soil. If the difference between the two pH measurements is large, it means that the soil pH is easily changed, and a low rate of lime will suffice. If the soil pH changes only a little after the buffering solution has reacted, it means that the soil pH is difficult to change and a larger lime addition is needed to reach the desired pH for the crop.

The reasons that a soil may require differing amounts of lime to change the soil pH relates to the soil CEC and the "reserve" acidity that is contained by the soil. Soil acidity is controlled by the amount of hydrogen (H+) and aluminum (Al+++) that is either contained in, or generated by the soil and soil components. Soils with a high CEC have a greater capacity to contain or generate these sources of acidity. Therefore, at a given soil pH, a soil with a higher CEC (thus a lower buffer pH) will normally require more lime to reach a given target pH than a soil with a lower CEC.
 

NaturalFarmer

Well-Known Member
You are using bold font on pablum while hurling grade school comments.
Why are you here anyways? Seriously why? You have more than proven yourself to know very little so why stay? Tell me how and why my soil is producing CO2 for six months? 1000ppm+ You are an idiot and you must know it.
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
I noticed no bold font when you cut and paste. Does this mean you don't really believe it? You're not yelling it.

Maybe go upstairs and ask mom. She's good at putting these things in perspective for you
 

Rrog

Well-Known Member
Even your mom wouldn't say that. I guess it's good you're getting outside your comfort zone and interacting with people other than her
 
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