SupraSPL
Well-Known Member
Still running the same soil but last year I started to run in to problems due to lack of runoff (my runoff worked its way up to 5000 TDS). So I took ALL my potting soil (9 years of use and reuse) and rinsed it thoroughly with rain water at 5ppm. About 15 gallons of water for every 5 gallon bucket of soil. That got my runoff down to about 800ppm (1:1 slurry test was about 350 ppm after an hour soak). From now on I will rinse them down to at least 1200 ppm after every cycle.
The idea was to flush out built up sodium (which tends to runoff readily) and to try and restore a more ideal nutrient balance. Also added some calmag via pulverized dolomite + oyster shell meal since I have been shy with the dolomite and Ive been using rain water which is only 5ppm TDS.
Once I had all the soil rinsed I re amended with LOTS of green leaves and grass clippings. Roughly 1:1 soil to greens by volume. Im trying to use more vegetative inputs rather than animal based, the idea being it should add calmag and keep nutrients more in balance with less runoff waste and less need for testing. I used golden rod flowers (with galls), sumac berries, sumac leaves, wild grape leaves, wild grapes, oriental bittersweet leaves, jewel weed, maple leaves, box elder leaves and basically anything green except I avoided using bittersweet nightshade, white snakeroot, pokeweed and virginia creeper since they are toxic or irritating for some people and I like to get my hands dirty. Not sure if that matters but I had plenty of non toxic plants to work with.
Stinging nettles can be composted and you can handle the compost with no problem once it rots down. I love getting weed seeds in the mix because they contribute to cover and nutrient cycling in the pots during use but they never get a chance to get out of hand. (Bugs are awesome, pill bugs and rove beetles, soil mites and spiders are all helpful. Soak the plant and the surface of the soil down with Neem oil to put a hurting on thrips and fungus gnats.
I let it cook in bins (summer temps 60-90F), watering it and turning it as needed and it was done in about 3-4weeks. Runoff was back up to 1500-2000 ppm and 1:1 slurry test was 800-1000 ppm after an hour soak.
Then I would mix that about 1:1 with more rinsed out soil and no problem planting clones directly into it, water-only through veg and early flowering.
If any plants faded/yellowed too early (3-4 weeks of flowering) I would make a green leaf slurry (chop up a bunch of green leaves with the mower) and let it soak in rain water for 12-36 hours (avoiding fermentation). I would adjust ppm to about 500 by diluting with rain water and then water it in. It also tends to get foamy if it soaks long enough making a great organic wetting agent.
The idea was to flush out built up sodium (which tends to runoff readily) and to try and restore a more ideal nutrient balance. Also added some calmag via pulverized dolomite + oyster shell meal since I have been shy with the dolomite and Ive been using rain water which is only 5ppm TDS.
Once I had all the soil rinsed I re amended with LOTS of green leaves and grass clippings. Roughly 1:1 soil to greens by volume. Im trying to use more vegetative inputs rather than animal based, the idea being it should add calmag and keep nutrients more in balance with less runoff waste and less need for testing. I used golden rod flowers (with galls), sumac berries, sumac leaves, wild grape leaves, wild grapes, oriental bittersweet leaves, jewel weed, maple leaves, box elder leaves and basically anything green except I avoided using bittersweet nightshade, white snakeroot, pokeweed and virginia creeper since they are toxic or irritating for some people and I like to get my hands dirty. Not sure if that matters but I had plenty of non toxic plants to work with.
Stinging nettles can be composted and you can handle the compost with no problem once it rots down. I love getting weed seeds in the mix because they contribute to cover and nutrient cycling in the pots during use but they never get a chance to get out of hand. (Bugs are awesome, pill bugs and rove beetles, soil mites and spiders are all helpful. Soak the plant and the surface of the soil down with Neem oil to put a hurting on thrips and fungus gnats.
I let it cook in bins (summer temps 60-90F), watering it and turning it as needed and it was done in about 3-4weeks. Runoff was back up to 1500-2000 ppm and 1:1 slurry test was 800-1000 ppm after an hour soak.
Then I would mix that about 1:1 with more rinsed out soil and no problem planting clones directly into it, water-only through veg and early flowering.
If any plants faded/yellowed too early (3-4 weeks of flowering) I would make a green leaf slurry (chop up a bunch of green leaves with the mower) and let it soak in rain water for 12-36 hours (avoiding fermentation). I would adjust ppm to about 500 by diluting with rain water and then water it in. It also tends to get foamy if it soaks long enough making a great organic wetting agent.
Attachments
-
551.5 KB Views: 14
-
586.1 KB Views: 13
Last edited: