No-till top dress recommendations?

J Bone

Member
Hi No-tillers

I was wondering what top dresses people like for when you put your plant into flower for the first cycle?

Also, what top dresses do you guys like for after the first harvest before the 2nd cycle?

Any no-till info will be greatly appreciated!

-JB
 

GreenSanta

Well-Known Member
Whatever I can get my hands on, is in season, or is free. I like comfrey, hay, i like to have a layer of vermicasting under the mulch. If I feel the soil is depleted of nutrients (big plant on previous round) I will also top dress some dry amendments like a 4-4-4 blend under the mulch, anywhere from 2 tablespoons to a cup depending...Also between watering I Like Keep That Upper Layer moist.
 

bizfactory

Well-Known Member
I've been doing homemade worm castings + shredded comfrey + 1/4 cup of the BAS Craft nutrient blend on initial planting and just before flowering. Using 15g fabric pots. This has been working well for me but I also feel like I'm going to have to start backing off. Maybe only once per grow.
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
Hi No-tillers

I was wondering what top dresses people like for when you put your plant into flower for the first cycle?

Also, what top dresses do you guys like for after the first harvest before the 2nd cycle?

Any no-till info will be greatly appreciated!

-JB
ideally the BEST thing, and most natural would be a rich compost.
Past that a light fish meal with castings is great.
 
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J Bone

Member
Thanks for the feedback everyone!

I'm fairly new to notill and I just want to make sure my soil is getting enough food to feed the plant through flower. That craft blend from BAS looks like a nice mix!

greasemonkey mann how thick of a layer of compost do you like to apply and how many times will you top dress through flower? Or is one top dress enough with the assistance of AACT and SST?

Thanks again for the responses!
JB
 

D port Growth

Well-Known Member
Compost, Worm Castings, Live Worms, and Buffaloam Soil Alive. Also for mulching I use Rice Hulls and Straw or Hay. Cover Crop is essential in my no till look into Crimson Clover and Buckwheat Grass. Mychorrhizal Fungi and Beneficial Baacteria also play a large roll. For Flower get brewing my man! Seed Sprouts, Fish Bone Meal, Kelp, Alfalfa, EWC, Beneficials Coconut Water, Langbienite. just to name a few ingredients. I have made a lot of tea recipes and I'm more than happy to share with you.
 

J Bone

Member
Compost, Worm Castings, Live Worms, and Buffaloam Soil Alive. Also for mulching I use Rice Hulls and Straw or Hay. Cover Crop is essential in my no till look into Crimson Clover and Buckwheat Grass. Mychorrhizal Fungi and Beneficial Baacteria also play a large roll. For Flower get brewing my man! Seed Sprouts, Fish Bone Meal, Kelp, Alfalfa, EWC, Beneficials Coconut Water, Langbienite. just to name a few ingredients. I have made a lot of tea recipes and I'm more than happy to share with you.
Hey D Port Growth! I would love to hear some of your tea recipes!

Iv'e been trying to get in the routine of making a veg and flower tea once a week. Do you think thats good or should I do more or less?

I also try to do a seed sprout tea once a week with the organic blue corn from BAS.
 

platt

Well-Known Member
Calcium and sulphur, this is a great article by buildasoil on top dressing.https://buildasoil.com/blogs/news/12456789-what-should-i-top-dress-my-organic-grow-with
looks nice! not bad for someone who can barely distinguish a zebra from a giraffe. have a look to this gem


What's So Cool About Super Soil? The Super Soil Recipe Breakdown. February 26 2014, 31 Comments
https://buildasoil.com/blogs/news/12533881-whats-so-cool-about-super-soil-the-super-soil-recipe-breakdown

If you have been reading about cultivating indoors with organic soil then you've heard of SubCool's Super Soil. I admit to starting with this mix and thought I was really doing something special when I first went for it. I bought all the stuff and was really excited to use it.

My results were actually pretty good, but I've since moved on I think you should too.

Besides the "base soil" being purchased instead of made from scratch, I have many other issues. All in all, taking bagged soil and adding worm castings and nutrients isn't a bad idea, but it can be improved upon and money can be saved.

Here is the Recipe: 8 large bags of a high-quality organic potting soil with coco fiber and mycorrhizae (i.e., your base soil) 25 to 50 lbs of organic worm castings 5 lbs steamed bone meal 5 lbs Bloom bat guano 5 lbs blood meal 3 lbs rock phosphate ¾ cup Epson salts ½ cup sweet lime (dolomite) ½ cup azomite (trace elements) 2 tbsp powdered humic acid

Now I'll go through each item:

  1. Bagged soil - WHY? when we are going to the trouble to mix all of this up anyways, me might as well save some money and increase the quality. The other factor here is having exact control over the inputs. These soils already have unknown quantities of nutrients and the quality control isn't perfect, what if you get a hot batch and then further amend it? I would avoid the potential room for problems and make a soil using many standard recipes but most go with 1 part peat, 1 part compost and 1 part aeration.

  2. Mycorrhizae: Adding this to your soil doesn't make sense and is a waste of resources. Anyone who works with mycorrhizae will tell you to apply to the rootzone at transplant or seedling stage. Obviously this super soil mix is for the bottom of the container and nowhere near the rootzone at the proper time. Basically just a complete waste of Myco.

  3. 25 to 50 lbs of organic worm castings: I agree with using wormcastings but that is a WIDE range to apply. Why 25 - 50? I think that when building your base mix you should be factoring in a certain percentage of castings and compost. Not adding to this all later on in a made up way.

  4. 5 lbs steamed bone meal - This is a by-product from the Cattle industry and is really not a good input for organic soil production. Fish bone meal however is great for this same purpose and is safer to use.

  5. 5 lbs Bloom bat guano - Guano is very expensive and really not neccessary. This is a fast release nutrient and is more in line with the feed the plant regimen instead of soil building. That and harvesting guano is rarely safe and sustainable, there are many reasons to avoid this.... Plus the Fish bone meal that we just mentioned has you covered already along with all the other plant based amendments and worm castings that you should be using.

  6. 5 lbs blood meal - More slaughterhouse waste and sure to be unclean. Why use the blood from McDonalds cows when you can add nitrogen so easily through alfalfa meal, fish meal and or worm castings.

  7. 3 lbs rock phosphate - This is the 3rd phosphate product and it makes sense because in a soil this rich and without the mycorrhizae actually working like it should there isn't going to be a very good way to access P. That's okay, in a properly built soil you don't need a million sources of P, the plants will get it and the biology and fungi will make sure of it. Not only that but soft rock phosphate is high in heavy metals like cadmium that are proven to be harmful. When growing cannabis, the trichomes will store the heavy metals and smoking the plant will not allow the typical body safety system of passing through the liver etc. before going into your blood. For this reason materials high in heavy metals are typically avoided.

  8. ¾ cup Epsom salts - Absolutely no reason to add more magnesium sulfate to a good soil mix. A little known fact about soil is that the Calcium to Magmesium Ratio will control the texture of the soil and adding epsom salts is a good way to tighten the soil and there are better ways to get sulfur, like gypsum.

  9. ½ cup sweet lime (dolomite) - Dolomite lime should be avoided as it is completely out of balance with the proper Calcium to magnesium ratios for proper soil building. Especially when considering long term no-till soil use.

  10. ½ cup azomite (trace elements) - This is good stuff and is just a "brand" name rock dust that has all the elements from A-Z hence Azomite.... thing is, that also includes heavy metals. While I'd use this in the veggie garden, many will avoid this in the medicine garden.

  11. 2 tbsp powdered humic acid - Good advice but humic acid typically purchased at the grow shop is from leanordite and isn't really helpful and is very expensive. Avoid this and get Ful-Power from Bio-ag and use it with waterings.
So then after all this work. You mix this up and let it sit for 30 days. Then use this in the BOTTOM of your soil container. What is interesting is that all though this makes sense at first glance... it's all way off. Nature doesn't have all the nutrients on the bottom in fact it's the opposite, all the plants in nature have the nutrients on the top. That is why building a soil, using mulch and topdressing work so well. It's things like this that make the real organic gardners and farmers laugh at all of us sometimes.

So if you've been using super soil, don't feel bad, I think we all did at some point and I owe Subcool a lot because he actually got this semi-organic mix discussed enough that the mainstream took notice... that alone was helpful at getting me to where I am today.

I hope this article helps!

Here is another article on a popular soil recipe called TLO: http://buildasoil.com/blogs/news/9885098-why-tlo-dissecting-the-rev-mix-line-by-line
 

D port Growth

Well-Known Member
here is a great quick veg tea recipe i use every other week. this recipe i use with 55 Gallons 1/4 cup EWC, 1/4 cup of nitrogen laden bat guano,
Hey D Port Growth! I would love to hear some of your tea recipes!

Iv'e been trying to get in the routine of making a veg and flower tea once a week. Do you think thats good or should I do more or less?

I also try to do a seed sprout tea once a week with the organic blue corn from BAS.
1/4 cup alfalfa,1/4 c kelp, 5 tablespoons elemental powder from roots (cal-mag from protein hydrolysate) or 2.5 ml per g liquid cal phos from eggshells and 1-2oz of coconut water add your choice of Mycorrhizal fungi and beneficial bacteria or IMO works best. brew for 72 hours in the 60-65 degree range and re-apply the myco and bennies during the last 4 hours of brew right before you use it. presto! a awesome veg booster
 

D port Growth

Well-Known Member
let me know when your ready for a flower tea. or some seed sprout teas, or ferments. ill hit you with those too. also I've been using these for years with no issues.
 

J Bone

Member
here is a great quick veg tea recipe i use every other week. this recipe i use with 55 Gallons 1/4 cup EWC, 1/4 cup of nitrogen laden bat guano,


1/4 cup alfalfa,1/4 c kelp, 5 tablespoons elemental powder from roots (cal-mag from protein hydrolysate) or 2.5 ml per g liquid cal phos from eggshells and 1-2oz of coconut water add your choice of Mycorrhizal fungi and beneficial bacteria or IMO works best. brew for 72 hours in the 60-65 degree range and re-apply the myco and bennies during the last 4 hours of brew right before you use it. presto! a awesome veg booster
Awesome recipe D Port Growth! Do you make your own liquid cal-phos from fermenting eggshells? Also, how do you like to cultivate your indigenous microorganisms?
 

J Bone

Member
What fermented plant extracts do people like to use for veg and flower?

I'm making one from beet leaves and roots, and I'm making another one from kelp meal. I've been using equal parts plant matter to sugar with a little homemade lacto bacilli serum added in. It's currently still fermenting.
 

D port Growth

Well-Known Member
I just watched that video for the fist time in a couple years and I forgot to mention. This dude goes like 1000 times overkill on the molasses, but other than that his method is pretty solid
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the feedback everyone!

I'm fairly new to notill and I just want to make sure my soil is getting enough food to feed the plant through flower. That craft blend from BAS looks like a nice mix!

greasemonkey mann how thick of a layer of compost do you like to apply and how many times will you top dress through flower? Or is one top dress enough with the assistance of AACT and SST?

Thanks again for the responses!
JB
Sorry, didn't see that you asked me a question.
My compost is a lil different than most, but I keep topdressing over the yr, as soon as the previous topdress (disappears) then I add more, the cool thing with lots of worms in your mix and a healthy plant, as they both tend to "consume" the compost, it literally disappears in about 20 days or so.
It also depends on the surface area of your containers too.
but you can NEVER overdue it, assuming the compost is finished.
no need for any teas either, the compost is absolutely crawling with microbial life
 
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J Bone

Member
Sorry, didn't see that you asked me a question.
My compost is a lil different than most, but I keep topdressing over the yr, as soon as the previous topdress (disappears) then I add more, the cool thing with lots of worms in your mix and a healthy plant, as they both tend to "consume" the compost, it literally disappears in about 20 days or so.
It also depends on the surface area of your containers too.
but you can NEVER overdue it, assuming the compost is finished.
no need for any teas either, the compost is absolutely crawling with microbial life
Thanks for the response greasemonkeymann! So all you ever add is compost? If you don't mind me asking, whats in your special compost/ how is it different then most?
 
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