polyarcturus
Well-Known Member
yeah its the tutorial in my signature? and then there is all the stiff in my grow journals.
no pastuization this time, and i just saw my first sign of growth in the strawmpy today! but thanks man this straw thing works pretty well ill have to get pics of my last 100% straw plants roots.Great thread. I love your inventiveness.
I have only used straw in a variety of mushroom subs.
It is highly contam resistant when it is pasteurized properly.
Take care,
JD
the soil center guy.... i dont know exactly what happened to her, i think it was matter of timing(stuntuned during transplant) and the fact i used the shittiest clones available.Checked you out like I said I would last night!
Thoughts:
I'm a bit partial to everything given the end result ya know?!
BUT I do see that our girls don't mind a little straw haha!
Will def. look a little further into it bro!
First the mushroom compost! Next I'll with some straw!
I change one variable at a time in case the results aren't warranted! Then I know what I did wrong!
But in all, I'm doesn't sure that the straw alone is capable of supporting a large enough microbe population for the plants to thrive.
How do you feel about that bro? I notice you said you where doing a mostly soil center with a straw outside and you had to kill it off?
i could not find any evidence of herbicide "in" straw, there have been cases of contaminated straw and manure ect. but the only reference i could find was about pasteurizing straw with cal. lime, which would leave a spot in the yard, but not cause of the straw.Great thread. I love your inventiveness.
I have only used straw in a variety of mushroom subs.
It is highly contam resistant when it is pasteurized properly.
Take care,
JD
actually, straw is balanced at a perfect 30:1 carbon to nitrogen ratio. It will break down into perfect humus on its own.Just watch out for Nitrogen lock out.
The carbon (straw) you are adding is like wood, it needs fire (nitrogen) to burn, breakdown and turn to ash (humus).
http://soils.usda.gov/sqi/management/files/C_N_ratios_cropping_systems.pdfactually, straw is balanced at a perfect 30:1 carbon to nitrogen ratio. It will break down into perfect humus on its own.
thats funny, because every published BOOK I've ever read has said 30:1. For every USDA study there is a truer one published.http://soils.usda.gov/sqi/management/files/C_N_ratios_cropping_systems.pdf
Actually, as you can read on page two, the C/N ratio of straw as 80:1, and the ideal microbial environment at 24:1