Also, why would I invest funds to falsify such a claim that the above ingredients don't contain micro's? It's rather you that should support your claim with facts.
Hey Kass, ask and you shall receive. I stumbled upon this video with two soil consultants that learned some things from the same agronomist I did(Mike Crady/
@slownickel). One of the consultants(Matt LePlante) had 8 or 10 different bagged soils analyzed. He happened to test two bags of FFOF from different pallets. They both tested very low in zinc and manganese, low in calcium, and ridiculously high in iron and aluminum. They show all the test results starting at 2:07:40. The FFOF micronutrient metal numbers only show for a brief second or so starting at 2:12:30, but it is possible to pause the video and zoom in albeit a bit blurry.
Here's the breakdown:
| FFOF1 | FFOF2 | Ideal |
Mn(ppm) | 10 | 11 | 50-100 |
Zn(ppm) | 1.97 | 3.19 | 25 |
Fe(ppm) | 196 | 270 | 50-100 |
Al(ppm) | 94 | 82 | 0 |
Ca(%) | 48 | 62 | 85 |
This video was from a year ago, the soil tests are even older, and it seems FFOF used to have granite dust in it which would account for the high Fe and Al. Crab meal is still high in Fe though. Either way, every soil he tested was deficient in Manganese, Zinc, Boron, and Copper. Starting at 59:30 in the video they discuss the necessity of adding those metals in sulfate form to all soils...except boron which comes in the form of sodium tetraborate(borax). They also talk about some organic amendments(kelp, rock dust, soft rock phosphate) that are notoriously high in heavy metals. Kelp is high in sodium as well which is ideally not present in the soil aside from the small amount in borax.
For the record, I agree with Matt LePlante more than Bryant Mason, but I follow Slownickel's recommendations strictly as they have all proven to be true in my trials. He has an excellent thread at this link here:
https://www.icmag.com/forum/marijuana-growing/cannabis-botany-and-advanced-growing-science/330463-slownickel-lounge-pull-up-a-chair-cec-interpretation. It's about 300 pages, but you can skip posts by anyone but him and it makes it a more manageable read. He's an agronomist and farmer with 40+ years experience in the field and is still farming and researching to this day. He posts on IG as well. He is very adamant about the importance of having high calcium in the soil and plant tissue. High calcium is the only way to maximize yield and quality.
A great book about calcium is "More Food From Soil Science," by Dr. Victor Tiedjens. A free copy is available for download at soilandheal.org.