Just two of the 140+ tomatoes that I've planted, they appear to be taking well to transplant as expected.
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As is typical, I don't expect to see all too much growth until around May once the roots have spread a little more. Once that happens though, I anticipate some pretty explosive growth based on how well the native plants do out here.
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The photos above are the 3ft tall Peach trees we ordered and planted in early February. A coworker of mine told me that Peaches and Figs explode out here, from the looks of it he certainly wasn't joking.
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Above are the 3ft tall Golden Delicious and Pink Lady apple trees. The Pink Lady is doing awesome. The Golden Delicious is simply taking its time. Has a little bit of growth, but not as much as the Pink Lady. All things in time. The Golden Delicious is said to be the perfect cross-pollinator for a majority of Apple types, so they're planted side by side. They're planted rather close together, but this is because they are dwarf trees and will only get to about 10-15ft tall.
All throughout the yard there are around a dozen Apple sprouts that are poking through. Once they grow big enough, we will be grafting those Apple plants with some of the branches from the plants pictured above. Going to be a full-blown orchard back here in the next handful of years if all goes according to plan.
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And finally, we have 2 of the Blueberry bushes that were planted back in early February that are doing absolutely amazing. According to the TyTy website, these are supposed to produce a harvest the same year they're planted. It will be a smaller harvest, of course, but definitely better than nothing.
I will be conducting a little experiment with Blueberries to demonstrate the power of the microbes, and allowing
them to be in control of things, and not
us. The reason living soil grows thrive is due to the perfect unison of the plants and microbes communicating and coexisting with one another. The only thing we should be doing is starting the symbiosis, facilitating it, then leaving it the fuck alone.
The Blueberry experiment thesis
As some of you likely already know, blueberries require a 4.0-5.0 pH range to grow and thrive. That same pH range spells death for the vast majority of plants. It is difficult to see from the photos, but next to all of my blueberry plants are various types of tomatoes and strawberries. I will even be planting various types of pepper plants next to them.
Without microbes dictating the flow of things, this would spell certain death for the tomato, pepper, and strawberry plants nearby. Based on both research and personal experience, I aim to demonstrate that the microbes and plant roots have so much control over things, that I will do
absolutely nothing to intervene, and all of the plants will grow and thrive together in unison.
Why do I believe this?
Because the more than man intervenes with the already perfect system for plants that has been set in place, the more issues that arise. Let the microbes and plants do their own thing and leave it alone. The more we as humans do to "help", the more issues we cause with the plant and microbes' environment, causing chaos instead of order.
The way a living soil works is the roots communicate the plant's various needs to the microbes, bugs, and other critters involved in the soil web. The roots will exude "signals" and the soil web will respond in kind.
The root signals in rhizospheric inter-organismal communications
and
Signal interactions between roots and microorganisms.
Those are just a handful of studies. Even more fascinating than that though?
For fungi, protists, bacteria, and even higher animals, terpenes act as pheromones—chemical signals used by animals. More sources below
Source 2
Source 3
The plants will exude terpenes specific and unique to the plants themselves, which will attract equally specific and unique microbes and bugs to provide the plants with everything they need to flourish.
This same phenomenon also works at repelling various forms of life and will result in nature elimination of pests.
So, what does all of the above have to do with the blueberries?
If the soil is devoid of excess liming agents, and other inputs used by humans that effect the soil web's environment, and has a neutral pH (7.0), then the roots of the various types of plants will communicate in unison to lower the pH as needed. In this instance, the blueberries.
The tomato, strawberry, and pepper roots will each exude their own unique terpene signals, attracting the specific types of microbes (bacterial dominant) required to maintain a pH of 6.0-7.0 to ensure the plants thrive. Simultaneously, the blueberries will exude their own unique terpene signals that attract the specific types of microbes they need (fungi dominant) to thrive. Fungi do best in more acidic environments (4.0-6.0), where as bacteria do best between a 6.0-7.0 pH range.
Now,
I could provide human intervention, constantly top dressing the blueberries with peat moss and elemental sulfur to lower the pH by my own means. I could also sit and stress about whether my soil should be 'bacterial' or 'fungal' dominant and worry about which is best for the plants. But this would affect the land around the berries! Or I can do nothing, and let the plants and microbes do everything.
By doing this, the rhizosphere of the blueberry bushes will be the required 4.0-5.0 pH range in a fungal dominant environment and the rhizosphere of
any of the other plants will be their required pH ranges.
I will be posting and demonstrating the results of this experiment over the rest of the year until Winter. I have tomatoes, strawberries, and peppers planted all throughout the yard
away from the blueberry bushes. The plants
away from the berry bushes will be my "control" plants, the ones
next to the berry plants will be the "experiment" plants.
I will provide monthly photos of the control and experiment plants. If the speculation from my research and experiences are true, there will be little to no difference in the control and experiment plants. If I am wrong, the experiment plants will have diminished yields, or outright die. I believe this will be a success, as my experiences with living soil through the last 11+ years of my life give me faith in the natural system of things that has been set in place, and all we need to do is tap into it and leave it alone.
When I started with living soil back in 2012, I used a laundry list of products, loads of compost tea, EM-1 inoculants, and all that good stuff. I began with Subcool's (RIP) recipe. I have nothing but respect for him, however Subcool would always mention he never knew
why the soil worked, only that
it worked. I spent many years researching, experimenting, and experiencing things attempting to figure out how and why a living soil works. With every year that passed, I used less and less products, and interfered less and less with the plants. Now, 11 years later, the only things I have purchased for my garden this year are TM-7 and VAM mycorrhizae. I have yet to open the bag of TM-7, but have it if I need it.
I am blessed with so much rainfall, that I haven't watered a single plant this year. I literally have done nothing after I transplant this year. Outside of pruning, trellising, and so forth, I will continue to do nothing.
Depending on how much rain we get throughout the year, I doubt I'll even have to break out the hose at this rate. And that ignores the creek, and all of the water I have underground.
Thanks for reading!