I made the plunge last week. I'm using it with my synthetic H&G line up and they kick ass together! All my natural based fertilizers from H&G get along great with with my new organic teas, and when you have synthetic and organic working together in the same brew it makes something magical happen. My plants couldn't be happier, and I already thought they were as happy as they could get.
Brewing organic tea's is a lot of fun too! You save money, get to drink beer doing another hobby in the garage, and it is so cheap you can put it on your prized roses, vegetables, or fruit trees and see explosive results within days. The only draw back is that I need to clean my run-off catch more often because it can start to stink, but as long as it is in the root zone it stays fresh.
Read up on this month's Urban Garden magazine, this month is dedicated to organics, do it yourself organics (composting), and making liquid compost solution (brewing tea!) It's a fantastic article and puts your fears to rest about brewing organics and the dangers it could present to your plants. As long as you do it right, which is easy, it'll stay fresh for a good long while and your plants will love it.
Here is another great link I used to learn how to brew my own:
https://www.rollitup.org/dwc-bubbleponics/361430-how-breed-your-own-beneficial.html
This is directed toward DWC growers mainly, but I do not run a lot of DWC in my garden, just every now and then for giggles because I can. Sometimes I just don't feel like playing in the dirt. But this recipe works great for my soiless mix (coco, pete, perlite) and it works great in normal dirt in the ground. My recipe is a little different than Heisenberg. But I'm happy to share it.
I start with 4 gal of water and I add the following (these are pretty rough measurements you can adjust it to your own desired strengths):
-4 cups worm casting
-1 cup Jamaican guano
-6-8 oz kelp extract (buy the powdered formula, I got the liquid and it goes way to fast!)
-Recommended dose of Aqua Shield (I think it was 8 tsp, I'm not sure.)
-Healthy dose of your favorite mycorrhizae product
-3tbs of molasses or carboload or whatever else you would like use instead
-The recipe calls for a powdered humic acid, I actually got a job last week vending humic acid powder but haven't started yet, nor have I got any to try out yet, so I need to wait until next week. For right now I am using Liquid Karma because I have a LOT of it. I mean a whole lot, and most of it was given to me. I don't recommend using an expensive product like this.
-You can go ahead and throw in any extra beneficial life you may have and want to play around with. Tea is very forgiving. If you want more calcium you can pick up some bone meal and throw it in there, you can do a lot of different stuff. Some people like to use fish emulsion but I don't need all that Nitrogen, I have plenty, plus it smells like hell! I had a gal of Big Bloom laying around from a year ago (because fox farm sucks for growing pot, great veggies though) and I threw some of that in there becauses it is basically concentrated tea. and I have plenty to spare.
Any product where you see a bunch of latin on the back naming of species of something you've never heard of, pour it in.
I get a net pot bucket lid and stick a stocking in it, and I fill my stocking with all my products, make sure it is submerged, and go ahead and bubble it 48 hours. It works after 24, but I saw big improvements after 48. Go ahead and stick it in the fridge for up to 10 days after brewing it, and put a poison sign on it so nobody drinks it. Because if you didn't know it was liquid compost solution you would think it looked refreshing as fuck! Strangely enough, it stays fresh for up to a week outside the fridge if it's in your root zone. A wonderful organic relationship, so it works for DWC.
Hope that inspires you a little.