somebody041
Well-Known Member
so would i just weigh down the end of the plastic tubing? what do you use to weigh it down?
Good question. I've been wondering the same thing.so would i just weigh down the end of the plastic tubing? what do you use to weigh it down?
.Good question. I've been wondering the same thing.
Haha, no no, sorry. Not about the NPK reply. I was wondering how to weigh down the tubes when you put them in the compost water. They keep rising back up to the surface!.
Guys... At the end of the day, NPK is NPK, which ever source is cheap and more available, would be the one I'd use.
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The processed alfalfa pellets will be less bioactive (having very few live microorganisms in them), compared to the bunny manure which will be full of micro-life. Add some worm castings, or a handfull of clean, healthy soil to it and it works out..........pretty much the same......
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Hope this helps....
Keep it Real....Organic.....
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silly question here... but i was just thinking about this randomly:
the universal advice is to use compost teas immediately upon completion of bubbling. OK, fine... but isn't it odd that the BMO product range is (as i understand it) highly concentrated teas that are then to be mixed with water... yet they have a shelf life of a couple months.
what gives? what is BMO adding to their teas to make them storable? or is it just that their particular mixtures happen to last longer?
anyone have any thoughts on this? wouldn't it be nice to brew really hot "base teas", store them for months at a time, and then just add them to water and molasses (and bubble a bit if you like) for quick and easy feeding?
so why does their tea stay good for 2 years in this case, but the stuff we are making is more of the "use immediately" variety?The SPT stays good for 2 years it says on the bottle.
i believe that BMO's method to making their tea concentrates is to brew all ingredients together, then zap them to kill all living things in there, and once it is sterile they add their own endo/ecto bacteria and fungi.silly question here... but i was just thinking about this randomly:
the universal advice is to use compost teas immediately upon completion of bubbling. OK, fine... but isn't it odd that the BMO product range is (as i understand it) highly concentrated teas that are then to be mixed with water... yet they have a shelf life of a couple months.
what gives? what is BMO adding to their teas to make them storable? or is it just that their particular mixtures happen to last longer?
anyone have any thoughts on this? wouldn't it be nice to brew really hot "base teas", store them for months at a time, and then just add them to water and molasses (and bubble a bit if you like) for quick and easy feeding?
.so why does their tea stay good for 2 years in this case, but the stuff we are making is more of the "use immediately" variety?