Yeah I was thinking the same esp. it's pH is set to 6.3. But the manufacturer denies it, claiming it is very low in minerals. This is a soil for garden herbs, these chalk sensitive, and they grow in an environment like you would treat a hemp seedling.
Biobizz ammends this soil with worm compost + "Premix" (which is their own organic dry fertilizer mix) to increase the NPK from Lightmix 1200mg/L N, 200mg/L P & 200mg/L K (70% Peat 30% Perlit) to
All-Mix NPK 1700 1500 1500 (formulations vary sometimes, I have an old bag that showed 2200 1800 2000) and there, the bags state as ingredients 5% organic dry fertilizer, 10% worm casting, 30% perlit & 55% peat.
So it stands to reason if they would have used a nitrogen-rich dry ammend fertilizer to boost up the N of their lightmix they would have stated that, too. As so are our regulations.
But I don't see why? they could have just used peat for that nitrogen source. Yesterday I read everything I found about peat in my academic literature
Scheffer/Schachtschabel – Soil Science published in English by Springer
soilchem.ethz.ch
it's not much but the entries make it clear that there are so many different forms of peat - more than 10, in various stages of decay. The book explains that the process of breaking down of plant material can come to a halt - due to the anaerobic nature of the marshs, and this does stop the freeing of nitrogen (and else) - which is then still resident as organic macro-molecules, fibre & proteins. Yeah, and then in your pot you generate an aerobic environment where bacteria can break down this matter thereby gradually freeing nutrition ions.
The book generally compares peat to low-nutrition compost.
And further says that there are major local differences depending on the water-influx: if it is only rainwater, the peat is not rich at all. But some marsh are "fed" by surrounding agricultural lands when farmers spray slurry from animals as fert and that can accumulate in marshes as well.
Even sea-water can be the reason why some marshes form and that has a pH of 8.2.
But ultimately, you are right when you state it's about Pro-Mix - which I don't have. But I know alot of growers here that treat peat-mixes like soil in both watering & fertilization practices (pH 6.5 + wet'n'dry cycle) so it works both way. And they water it neutral, even slightly basic as recommended by the manufacturer (but it's organics)
Hello fellow farmers. I thought I'd share an email I got from BioBizz concerning different questions that seem to be popping up again and again so here we go. Question: Everyone knows that charts are just an avarage and every plant is different. But let's say the values given are indeed an...
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