randomhero1
Well-Known Member
Fairly new to the compost tea biz. Built my own brewer out of a 5 gal bucket. Been brewing for a couple months now and the combination ive been using has been working really well for me.
2 tsp voodoo juice
2 capfuls Foxfarm big bloom
1 tsp cytoplus humic acid concentrate
1 small handful ancient forest alaskan humus compost (loose, not in a sock or bag)
1 small scoop of zho
3 tbsp unsulphured blackstrap molasses
brewed for 48-72 hours til its nice and frothy
When i start from scratch, i add a capful of saponin to aid with fungi production.
Plants go apeshit over it.
I kinda keep a perpetual brew going on. 1/2 strength on all the ingredients when youve got the perpetual brew going on and full strength on molasses. Remember to keep feeding the bacteria in the brew, otherwise they go anaerobic, stink like hell, and are not beneficial for your plants. You can always tailor the ingredients to your liking, you really dont need much to get the brew started. Remember, you just need a population of bacteria to start brewing with, youre going to be breeding them. Too many people just want to dump a large quantities of ingredients in and its totally unnecessary. Ive had the same container of voodoo juice for almost 3 months and its only 1/4 of the way down. This is an excellent method of extending the amounts of alot of bacterial additives such as voodoo juice. I also used to propogate fungi by mixing some ancient forest, oats, and water and letting them sit for a couple days in a dark place until you get a little fungi brewing in there, then I would add it to my bucket. However, the brewing fungi gets a little icky, so i discontinued this part.
I also keep a seperate 5 gallon bucket full of water and aerating to remove the chlorine. If youre in a pinch as well, i also use tetra pond dechlorinator. Remember though, with dechlorinators, alot of them will inhibit bacterial growth due to the fact they have sodium thiosulfate as an ingredient. Tetra products, namely the dechlorinators, do not use this additive, so they are safe for your brewing needs.
When I treat with the compost tea, I replace what i use with aerated water from the bucket, then replace the water in the bucket. Ive cleaned the bucket out once a month using just chlorinated water and elbow grease.
When applied, i usually apply at half strength.
All opinions are welcome. Know of an additive that would work better for me or something I havent mentioned using. Share it!
2 tsp voodoo juice
2 capfuls Foxfarm big bloom
1 tsp cytoplus humic acid concentrate
1 small handful ancient forest alaskan humus compost (loose, not in a sock or bag)
1 small scoop of zho
3 tbsp unsulphured blackstrap molasses
brewed for 48-72 hours til its nice and frothy
When i start from scratch, i add a capful of saponin to aid with fungi production.
Plants go apeshit over it.
I kinda keep a perpetual brew going on. 1/2 strength on all the ingredients when youve got the perpetual brew going on and full strength on molasses. Remember to keep feeding the bacteria in the brew, otherwise they go anaerobic, stink like hell, and are not beneficial for your plants. You can always tailor the ingredients to your liking, you really dont need much to get the brew started. Remember, you just need a population of bacteria to start brewing with, youre going to be breeding them. Too many people just want to dump a large quantities of ingredients in and its totally unnecessary. Ive had the same container of voodoo juice for almost 3 months and its only 1/4 of the way down. This is an excellent method of extending the amounts of alot of bacterial additives such as voodoo juice. I also used to propogate fungi by mixing some ancient forest, oats, and water and letting them sit for a couple days in a dark place until you get a little fungi brewing in there, then I would add it to my bucket. However, the brewing fungi gets a little icky, so i discontinued this part.
I also keep a seperate 5 gallon bucket full of water and aerating to remove the chlorine. If youre in a pinch as well, i also use tetra pond dechlorinator. Remember though, with dechlorinators, alot of them will inhibit bacterial growth due to the fact they have sodium thiosulfate as an ingredient. Tetra products, namely the dechlorinators, do not use this additive, so they are safe for your brewing needs.
When I treat with the compost tea, I replace what i use with aerated water from the bucket, then replace the water in the bucket. Ive cleaned the bucket out once a month using just chlorinated water and elbow grease.
When applied, i usually apply at half strength.
All opinions are welcome. Know of an additive that would work better for me or something I havent mentioned using. Share it!
