My living soil wont cook!

I have added more nitrogen,, watered with molasses, and inoculated with Microlife C. Cool as a cucumber. I followed subcools recipe, using roots organic and worm castings. Any ideas?
 

DoobieDoobs

Well-Known Member
How do you know it's not cooking? I've seen around in YouTube videos and around here that you should let your soil mix cook for about 2 months, and my personal experience so far agrees with that statement.

I made my mix, filled the pots with it, I watered slowly slowly untill I saw a little bit of runoff come out of the bottom. Then I did nothing for 2 months besides from watering a little whenever I felt the first two inches of my pot were dry enough, and that's it. So far so good.
 

OVH

Well-Known Member
Umm, because it is not hot?
I’ve had soil cook that never gets hot. I like to put leaves from plants into top part of soil and cover. This acts as a gauge for microbe activity.

After 2 months they’re always gone and you know the microbes have also broken down your amendments. If they’re still there you know somethings wrong.
 

Northwood

Well-Known Member
83 ambient
86 core
81 outside, although it was 90 earlier today
Well thank goodness that your soil is at least 3 degrees above. Otherwise it would mean it had less bacteria and fungi respirating in it than ditch dirt. Lol *kidding*

It could be just slow inoculation too if you have a lot of additives with a reasonable C/N ratio and nothing is happening yet. Remember bagged soil can be pretty sterile and I don't know anything about the product you used. I'd rather inoculate my soil with my worm castings because I know the microbiology (and the worms wriggling around in there) are viable and extremely diverse containing local biological inputs (from the garden in my backyard mostly).
 

sirtalis

Well-Known Member
I recently had some super soil cooking covered with a tarp. It was still cold until I placed it in 10 gal pots where I plan to let the myco web establish for a few weeks. One day later and the center of the pots are a solid 20 degrees hotter than ambient temps.

I don't think I'm going to try to cook in a giant pile anymore, it seems like the activation is slower. Might as well cook in their "homes" and let the myco web establish, without another disturbance event. If you've ever grown shrooms, you shouldn't shake your rye jar more than once.

That being said, if I can think 6 months ahead I'd go for a big pile. I bet it's like drying bud, where the slower the process the better.
 
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