King Avitas
Well-Known Member
So in an attempt to get away from mixing multiple bottles of synthetic and non-synthetic nutrients daily to feed my plants, I want to try an organic-ish no till mix for my plants.
This will be a first for me.
First off my room is sealed and I suppliment CO² and will continue with bottled CO² in my future grows. So I guess my first question is, will a no-till living-soil be able to release enough nutrients to my plants quick enough to keep up to my performance style of growing?
I grow in an 8x8 room with a canopy of 4x8. Most of my seeds packs are 5 seeds so I will probably grow about 4-5 plants of the same strain in my future grows and will use SCROG techniques to fill the 4x8 canopy area. This should allow me to utilize 15 gallon grow bags or air pots, pot type is still up in the air as I consider things like run off and water retention. I realize that I don't really need or even want run off with a no till soil but I also don't want it retain huge amounts of water. I want to water more often than not.
As for watering, I am planning on adding a Growtek FM20 auto watering system. So I should be able to give the plants whatever level of water they require to maintain optimal saturation levels in my soil.
The biggest concern I have is the soil itself. I am leaning towards a soil that does not contain slaughter house type additives. I have looked into many recipe's and the one from Build a soils web site has caught my eye. I will not be purchasing anything from build a soi as I am in a different Country and shipping would be crazy. I can source most things locally for considerably less than buying a kit.
This is their recipe, should I be adding anything to it? Do all you organic pros think it will work for me?
Living Soil Recipe:
1 Part Organic Canadian Sphagnum Peatmoss
1 Part Premium Organic Compost
**Was thinking 60/40 compost/EWC**
1 Part Premium Organic Aeration and Drainage (We use Rice hulls and Pumice)
**Pumice is a no go here, was thinking perlite/clay balls/rice hulls. I really want to add rice hulls for silica content.**
Fertilizer Amendments Per Cubic Foot:
1/2 Cup Premium Organic Kelp Meal
**I love kelp**
1/2 Cup Premium Organic Neem Cake
1/2 Cup Premium Organic Crustacean Meal
Mineral Amendments Per Cubic Foot:
2 Cups Premium Natural Basalt Rock Dust
1 Cup Premium Organic Oyster Shell Flour
1 Cup Premium Organic Gypsum
Extras:
5% Charged Bio-Char (From a leading company with testing to prove it)
**Will probably try to make and charge myself with some sort of local microbe innocculant**
Small Amount ThermX15 powder or just water with ThermX70 Liquid.
**Can probably find a local substitute*
I know I have thrown a lot of info out there, hopefully someone has enough patients to read all this and bounce some suggestions off of me. As I have said this is all new for me but I am a very experienced grower, just with synthetic nutes.
Also this mix calls for 33% peat moss, 33% airation and 33% compost.
Could a 30% peat, 30% compost and 40% airation mix work better to encourage rapid root growth or would it take too much compost out of the mix and starve my plants?
This will be a first for me.
First off my room is sealed and I suppliment CO² and will continue with bottled CO² in my future grows. So I guess my first question is, will a no-till living-soil be able to release enough nutrients to my plants quick enough to keep up to my performance style of growing?
I grow in an 8x8 room with a canopy of 4x8. Most of my seeds packs are 5 seeds so I will probably grow about 4-5 plants of the same strain in my future grows and will use SCROG techniques to fill the 4x8 canopy area. This should allow me to utilize 15 gallon grow bags or air pots, pot type is still up in the air as I consider things like run off and water retention. I realize that I don't really need or even want run off with a no till soil but I also don't want it retain huge amounts of water. I want to water more often than not.
As for watering, I am planning on adding a Growtek FM20 auto watering system. So I should be able to give the plants whatever level of water they require to maintain optimal saturation levels in my soil.
The biggest concern I have is the soil itself. I am leaning towards a soil that does not contain slaughter house type additives. I have looked into many recipe's and the one from Build a soils web site has caught my eye. I will not be purchasing anything from build a soi as I am in a different Country and shipping would be crazy. I can source most things locally for considerably less than buying a kit.
This is their recipe, should I be adding anything to it? Do all you organic pros think it will work for me?
Living Soil Recipe:
1 Part Organic Canadian Sphagnum Peatmoss
1 Part Premium Organic Compost
**Was thinking 60/40 compost/EWC**
1 Part Premium Organic Aeration and Drainage (We use Rice hulls and Pumice)
**Pumice is a no go here, was thinking perlite/clay balls/rice hulls. I really want to add rice hulls for silica content.**
Fertilizer Amendments Per Cubic Foot:
1/2 Cup Premium Organic Kelp Meal
**I love kelp**
1/2 Cup Premium Organic Neem Cake
1/2 Cup Premium Organic Crustacean Meal
Mineral Amendments Per Cubic Foot:
2 Cups Premium Natural Basalt Rock Dust
1 Cup Premium Organic Oyster Shell Flour
1 Cup Premium Organic Gypsum
Extras:
5% Charged Bio-Char (From a leading company with testing to prove it)
**Will probably try to make and charge myself with some sort of local microbe innocculant**
Small Amount ThermX15 powder or just water with ThermX70 Liquid.
**Can probably find a local substitute*
I know I have thrown a lot of info out there, hopefully someone has enough patients to read all this and bounce some suggestions off of me. As I have said this is all new for me but I am a very experienced grower, just with synthetic nutes.
Also this mix calls for 33% peat moss, 33% airation and 33% compost.
Could a 30% peat, 30% compost and 40% airation mix work better to encourage rapid root growth or would it take too much compost out of the mix and starve my plants?