Anyone ever use red soil for growing ?

Jjgrow420

Well-Known Member
I know they use this soil to grow the shitty stuff they grow outdoors here but I got some good seed from the states I'm not trying waste it on mud. Also never seen organic fert that look like fish food. Dude gave me this for free.
Bokashi
Fucking good shit man. Literally just picked up another bag and loaded up the gals outside. Been using for a couple years now on top of other dry amendments
 

VincenzioVonHook

Well-Known Member
Just some general Info on my experience with red soil. My garden soil is red and clay based, looks just like the red soil in your cup. Had to use some azomite, dolomite lime, peat or coir, wetting crystals and vermiculite to break the soil. It was solid as a rock, and just turned straight into red mud at first.
IMG20210819120841.jpg

IMG_20210819_115349.jpg

After breaking the soil with rock dust/limes and constantly tilling in compost and vermiculite over 6 months, it can grow pretty well, and has a good amount of potassium. Red soil is low in nitrogen, phosphorus and calcium and will need to be amended in you don't have your feed down pat.

This is what comes out of it now after a few years of garden composting. These didn't have any extra curricular feeding bar seasol every week or two, and the odd top dress of Coco meal and mulch every six weeks.
IMG20210119073152.jpg

I have used the clay soil from my yard to make potting mix, in equal parts with peat moss and worm castings, alongside fish and bone meal for N and P, Coco meal and potassium sulphate for K and S, kelp meal and alfalfa meal for growth stimulants and microbe activation, Neem meal for PM, and dolomite/glacial rock dust for mineral and microbe boost. The mix then gets 70/30d with perlite/vermiculite mix and does a good job.

Just depends on how long you need to or want to cook and break the soil before you grow in it.
 
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Green Refuge

Well-Known Member
Just some general Info on my experience with red soil. My garden soil is red and clay based, looks just like the red soil in your cup. Had to use some azomite, dolomite lime, peat or coir, wetting crystals and vermiculite to break the soil. It was solid as a rock, and just turned straight into red mud at first.
View attachment 4967967

View attachment 4967939

After breaking the soil with rock dust/limes and constantly tilling in compost and vermiculite over 6 months, it can grow pretty well, and has a good amount of potassium. Red soil is low in nitrogen, phosphorus and calcium and will need to be amended in you don't have your feed down pat.

This is what comes out of it now after a few years of garden composting. These didn't have any extra curricular feeding bar seasol every week or two, and the odd top dress of Coco meal and mulch every six weeks.
View attachment 4967954

I have used the clay soil from my yard to make potting mix, in equal parts with peat moss and worm castings, alongside fish and bone meal for N and P, Coco meal and potassium sulphate for K and S, kelp meal and alfalfa meal for growth stimulants and microbe activation, Neem meal for PM, and dolomite/glacial rock dust for mineral and microbe boost. The mix then gets 70/30d with perlite/vermiculite mix and does a good job.

Just depends on how long you need to or want to cook and break the soil before you grow in it.
Thanks for the info. The soil here is similar to yours I tried it by itself in a solo cup and it turned into mud after watering. I mixed 50/50 red soil and peat moss and still muddy. Outside in the yard I think it'll work well but putting it in a pot it's looking like a mud feast.
 
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