"...with supplementation by teas, microbes, molasses, humic/fulvic, seaweed, enzymes, and other some other stuff that includes a little bat guano (because I am not a purist to that degree)."
And there is nothing new or revolutionary about this. It would be nice if more people grew like this commercially, sure, but the whole notion of 'plant-based' organics seems pretty subjective to me. Whilst going on about the so-called risks associated with some animal by-product derived fertilizers (still largely unsubstantiated), the big picture here has yet to be ascertained. Animal by-products and wastes are an important part of the soil-food web in the natural world, and plenty of waste-derived fertilizers stimulate and feed soil microbes indoors and out.
Plenty of soil components are not derived from animals
or plants; such as greensand, gypsum, rock phosphates, and epsom salts. Some are more indirectly a result of plants/animals from hundreds of years ago, substantially decomposed and fossilized (such as certain guanos).
Still there is the issue that in nature decomposition itself is either a direct or indirect result of -
animals! Animals contribute to the decomposition of organic matter in various ways. Some just by helping to break up dead organic (plant/animal) matter to be further decomposed; perhaps by other animals, or passed on to the fungi and prokaryotic organisms that finish the process.
These animals: the detritivores, are a significant help to the other micro-organisms that contribute to decomposition. The best known example of a detritivore would be worms, such as earthworms. Others include nematodes, springtails, mites, millipedes, centipedes, beetles, slugs and snails. All or some of these critters can be found in your outdoor compost pile; even if you put nothing but plant materials in your compost. All of those animals, and eventually their excrement and carcasses are nurturing the other detrivores and micro-organisms as the cycle continues. Ultimately, the soil food web is just too complex to say that what is in there could be 99% plant based. I would go so far as to say that attempting to force it be that way is bordering on unnatural.
As an aside, are you aware how cows digest their food? They cannot directly break down cellulose in the plants that they eat. Cows are ruminant herbivores, they have a four-chambered stomach and the first stomach is the rumen. Inside the rumen is where the masticated plant material becomes further broken down and exposed to bacteria primarily. It is joined by the reticulum; containing bacteria, fungi, protozoa and other microbes. Collectively referred to as the reticulorumen, inside this organ is where the process of
microbial fermentation is carried out resulting in carbohydrates and volatile fatty acids.
After passing through the omasum, the materials and the microbes flow into the abomasum (true stomach) which is a much more acidic environment than the reticulorumen. Due to the pH change the microbes are killed and themselves digested, providing the cow with the majority of its nutrition. Whatever plant matter residues remain undigested after passing through the intestines are obviously excreted. After that, and possibly mixing with other materials, the aforementioned detritivores go to work and help other organisms continue the cycle; putting the nutrients back into the soil and turning that crap into humus.
But if all plant based components is what you desire, it wouldn't be very difficult to take a gander at one of the various lists of organic materials used for feeding plants. Asses the N-P-K, see what secondary and trace nutrients are present, how available they are and what they do for microbial populations. Put a list together and then decide whether you want to 'spoil' it all by adding worm castings (animal poo), kitchen compost (plethora of miniature animal poos and carcasses) or fossilized guano (mineralized poo).