Can someone give me a link to these blumat forums?
I feel like this is something that would improve my plants.
Check out that groovy thread and notice that pretty much everyone really felt that a constantly-moist soil was optimal for plants and soil. No runoff. Only moist
The exception would be when I would let the soil dry for a day because I was going to drench it with a compost slurry, etc.
In the next round, I'm wondering what role red wigglers might play for me. Will they live? Will they grab the surface mulch amendments and bring it deep? That would be pretty helpful.
I was just going to ask the same thing too, cuz I feed them teas and top dress too would you have to water those in by hand the top dress or would the blumats water them enough if you had the distribution drippers too? Sorry for all the stupid questions. I be use'd them in 5gallons in coco and loved them but I'm making the switch to no till.So what do you do when you want to feed them a compost/vermicompost/castings tea? Just close a valve in the system for a little while and water yourself?
The exception would be when I would let the soil dry for a day because I was going to drench it with a compost slurry, etc.
I would think if you have your blumats set and you feed teas or top dress and hand water it in the blumats would shut off since the soil is wet than once it dried out enough the blumats would turn back on and start dripping again so you wouldn't have to let the soil dry out or am I wrong about that?
I ran and will run again from the RO filter thru the Blumat pressure reducer to the drippers. So no res for me
I think the huge mass of soil retains temp and the drip isn't a big deal. Also, the drip lines are dark and help warm. The fact that they're rubber doesn't insulate the cold water
I use geopots - same thing. The breathable sides marries up great with drip