Evil-Mobo

Well-Known Member
It's my first run at it bro and my plants are the healthiest they have ever been and my workload is a lot easier lol. For me the organics part came secondary, since I am a pt, I was looking for something easier for me to manage and not have to worry about PH. EC. TDS, PPM's or any of that crap anymore.

You feed the soil, plant grows itself, everyone is happy. :bigjoint:
 

WindyCityKush

Well-Known Member
Check this thread out, full of great soil "recipes" , soil building links, ipm recipes, etc.... it's a long read but it's worth it. Headtreep, rrog, cann, and many others have great knowledge of no till and living organics. Seemed intimidating at first but now I'm just gathering all my materials for building my own soil along with my own compost bin, worm farm, etc.

https://www.rollitup.org/t/recycled-organic-living-soil-rols-and-no-till-thread.636057/
 

jrock420

Well-Known Member
Check this thread out, full of great soil "recipes" , soil building links, ipm recipes, etc.... it's a long read but it's worth it. Headtreep, rrog, cann, and many others have great knowledge of no till and living organics. Seemed intimidating at first but now I'm just gathering all my materials for building my own soil along with my own compost bin, worm farm, etc.

https://www.rollitup.org/t/recycled-organic-living-soil-rols-and-no-till-thread.636057/
Thankyou! I actually have looked innto this before but never no till. i always thought i had to replace soil. looks like i have my reading cut out for myself tomorrow. i have had a compost bin for 3 years now i just always used it for my tomatos and peppers and top dressing for bulbs and flowers around the yard. It was loaded with little red worms this summer, when i would till it i would see them all. I was always told if u got a bunch of worms in ur compost its good compost as the worms are happy and eating what ur puttin in
 

WindyCityKush

Well-Known Member
Thankyou! I actually have looked innto this before but never no till. i always thought i had to replace soil. looks like i have my reading cut out for myself tomorrow. i have had a compost bin for 3 years now i just always used it for my tomatos and peppers and top dressing for bulbs and flowers around the yard. It was loaded with little red worms this summer, when i would till it i would see them all. I was always told if u got a bunch of worms in ur compost its good compost as the worms are happy and eating what ur puttin in
Worms in the compost is excellent, use that shit to topdressing your plants and I can pretty much guarantee you will see better results than with that fox farm bottle stuff. When I get back in the garden I won't be using that crap anymore, or GH , or anything bottled for that matter. I don't even do no till yet but getting my compost bin together and shopping for amendments has been exciting
 

Evil-Mobo

Well-Known Member

jrock420

Well-Known Member
Here's some more info:
https://buildasoil.com/pages/the-complete-system

And someone I follow on YT:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLslhwvXNHz5_2MxCd9823id7CKtr8W-Ys

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLslhwvXNHz5_g6jlgxMW6US1Nc-E5eLvA

When you're done with all that if you are still interested I have the teaming with microbes book on PDf, don't buy it.

Cheers :bigjoint:
Thanks buddy! I can never suck up enough knowledge about this stuff! Ill have to roll a few joints and study tomorrow i guess lol.
 

jrock420

Well-Known Member
I have worms in all my pots....they do their magic and they are good for aeration
@jrock420 you need to go have a browse through "The Dons Organic Gardens", he's my partner. Plenty of ideas in there re: soil. We also got a thread under seedbanks, Jah Earth Collective
For sure thankyou. I will definatley get in there to read tomorrow. Will worms die if soil is left to dry out moderately? i know they sink down into moisture when it gets dry but i woudnt wanna kill em. that would suck
 

jrock420

Well-Known Member
Alright well looks like ive got quite alot of leaning to do tomorrow. Seems like half the work is making sure the worms and eveyone else is happy and fed in the soil and the rest falls into place. This will be my next adventure as it seems most cost effective and smart. Not to mention the plants will love it.
 

jrock420

Well-Known Member
That's a lot of learning to do for no till but it's worth it. I understand a lot about Mycology and beneficial microbes and all that good stuff but it's one of those things where I could read for a month straight but doesn't compare to actually trying it out. I'm gonna have to wait awhile until I move and start experimenting with it.
 
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