Recycled Organic Living Soil (ROLS) and No Till Thread

Bignutes

Well-Known Member
I will definitely look into floor dry, used it at work. Composition of 3 in 1 is classified as loam on the bag, but I suspect it's on the heavier side of loam. Ok I will add more aeration. Thank you for the floor dry tip!
 

wil2279

Well-Known Member
I used an autoflower super soil mix with a bag of organic potting soil for my current autoflower grow. I have watered with water and occasionally water with molasses. I plan to use organic dry ammendments and another bag of potting soil to mix with the soil I am currently using to make my soil for my next grow...
 

Snoopy808

Well-Known Member
Ive used alfalfa pellets to boost OM and feed my worms in my beds. Anyone use Bio-live? Its pricey but the ingredients listed would help in tailoring soil mix or amendments.
As far as no till cannabis its ok ive never done it. I do use cover crops in some gardens, but you got to till them in to get OM and N+ benefits. Then reseed again after you transplant.
 

Bignutes

Well-Known Member
Ive used alfalfa pellets to boost OM and feed my worms in my beds. Anyone use Bio-live? Its pricey but the ingredients listed would help in tailoring soil mix or amendments.
As far as no till cannabis its ok ive never done it. I do use cover crops in some gardens, but you got to till them in to get OM and N+ benefits. Then reseed again after you transplant.
When you plant legumes you dont have to till to get N because they fix nitrogen in their roots.
 

Snoopy808

Well-Known Member
Yes you do. That nitrogen wont get released via decomposition till plant is dead.
Azos, azotobacter bacterias are freeliving nitrogen fixers that do not need plsnt roots as a symbiotic host. You can get it at grow shops. Keep in mind nitrogen fixing plants and bacteria need good levels of calcium and phosphorus to thrive.
I had to add tons of cal-phos to orchards to get clover and vetch seed to take hold.
 

DonBrennon

Well-Known Member
Yes you do. That nitrogen wont get released via decomposition till plant is dead.
Azos, azotobacter bacterias are freeliving nitrogen fixers that do not need plsnt roots as a symbiotic host. You can get it at grow shops. Keep in mind nitrogen fixing plants and bacteria need good levels of calcium and phosphorus to thrive.
I had to add tons of cal-phos to orchards to get clover and vetch seed to take hold.
Yup, that nitrogen is locked up in the rhizome nodules, till it's dead at least
 

Bignutes

Well-Known Member
The debate isn't whether it needs to be dead, that's a given, it is that you don't have to till it in, ie mulch or work up, the nitrogen nodules are already in the soil......like the term no till.
 

Snoopy808

Well-Known Member
True. But if you plant and dont do anything you are waiting for the plant to finish its life cycle. Some beans can get rather tall, not talking bout pole beans. And need around 60 days or longer to complete their life cycle. Plus the rhizobacteria need to be present in the soil, added or use innoculated seed (there's organic sources ) otherwise they are not fixing nitrogen just fixing carbon.
I seed after harvest in fall with clover if needed and buckwheat and brown millet. Shallow till it in when ready to plant in spring and before the grain sets seed. The clover usually grows back and isn't tall like the millet or buckwheat can be and get too close to bottom branches.
 

Bignutes

Well-Known Member
True. But if you plant and dont do anything you are waiting for the plant to finish its life cycle. Some beans can get rather tall, not talking bout pole beans. And need around 60 days or longer to complete their life cycle. Plus the rhizobacteria need to be present in the soil, added or use innoculated seed (there's organic sources ) otherwise they are not fixing nitrogen just fixing carbon.
I seed after harvest in fall with clover if needed and buckwheat and brown millet. Shallow till it in when ready to plant in spring and before the grain sets seed. The clover usually grows back and isn't tall like the millet or buckwheat can be and get too close to bottom branches.
That's a pretty good setup your running, I like it.
 

mrplowdan

Active Member
Hi all,

I'm prepping for my outdoor and I have everything I need for the base soil except for the aeration.

I already have my 10 cufeet of compost, 10 cufeet of peat, a bucket of glacial rock dust (I need more). I'm planning on going down to the ocean to collect some kelp and clam shells to make some kelp meal and some more rock dust. Still looking for neem meal too.

Anyone know where I can get 10 cufeet of crushed pumice or lava rock or rice even hulls on Vancouver Island?

I'm having a hell of a time finding any. GardenWorks has pumice but they're closed due to C19 and they aren't taking order for another week - waiting to hear the price too.

Getting regular lava rock and taking a hammer to 10 cufeet of it, then sifting, seems like "fun" but it may be my only option.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
Hi all,

I'm prepping for my outdoor and I have everything I need for the base soil except for the aeration.

I already have my 10 cufeet of compost, 10 cufeet of peat, a bucket of glacial rock dust (I need more). I'm planning on going down to the ocean to collect some kelp and clam shells to make some kelp meal and some more rock dust. Still looking for neem meal too.

Anyone know where I can get 10 cufeet of crushed pumice or lava rock or rice even hulls on Vancouver Island?

I'm having a hell of a time finding any. GardenWorks has pumice but they're closed due to C19 and they aren't taking order for another week - waiting to hear the price too.

Getting regular lava rock and taking a hammer to 10 cufeet of it, then sifting, seems like "fun" but it may be my only option.
Build a Soil has all that.
 

mrplowdan

Active Member

Comfrey

Member
Hi all,

I'm prepping for my outdoor and I have everything I need for the base soil except for the aeration.

I already have my 10 cufeet of compost, 10 cufeet of peat, a bucket of glacial rock dust (I need more). I'm planning on going down to the ocean to collect some kelp and clam shells to make some kelp meal and some more rock dust. Still looking for neem meal too.

Anyone know where I can get 10 cufeet of crushed pumice or lava rock or rice even hulls on Vancouver Island?

I'm having a hell of a time finding any. GardenWorks has pumice but they're closed due to C19 and they aren't taking order for another week - waiting to hear the price too.

Getting regular lava rock and taking a hammer to 10 cufeet of it, then sifting, seems like "fun" but it may be my only option.
I've found bagged pumice from my local nursery in Langley, from a brand called Cinnabar Valley Farms (their potting soil is nice too). https://www.cinnabarfarms.com/product/00/0576/Growell-Pumice-12L-50plt . They're located in Nanaimo, perhaps they could sell to you in bulk. I think I paid about $6.50 Canadian per bag.
 

mrplowdan

Active Member
I've found bagged pumice from my local nursery in Langley, from a brand called Cinnabar Valley Farms (their potting soil is nice too). https://www.cinnabarfarms.com/product/00/0576/Growell-Pumice-12L-50plt . They're located in Nanaimo, perhaps they could sell to you in bulk. I think I paid about $6.50 Canadian per bag.
Thanks a lot!

I've contacted them and hopefully they sell to a nearby store.

They only sell soil direct to customers but I also asked if they'd sell me 100L bulk.

Thanks again
 

mrplowdan

Active Member
Thanks a lot!

I've contacted them and hopefully they sell to a nearby store.

They only sell soil direct to customers but I also asked if they'd sell me 100L bulk.

Thanks again
Yahoo, found a local source. Buckerfields

From: info <info@cinnabarfarms.com>
Date: Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 8:51 AM
Subject: RE: Growell Pumice 12L 50/plt
To: Dan <redacted>

Good Morning and thank you for your email.

It looks like the stores that we have sent to in the past few months would be
  • Buckerfields Langford
  • GardenWorks Victoria Blenkinsop

Good luck in your search!

Best regards,

Emma Winters

Cinnabar Valley Farms Ltd
Head Office: 250 758 7888
Warehouse Office
2321 Cienar Drive, Nanaimo, B.C., V9T 3L6
Tel: 250.758.7888 Fx: 250.758.8883
emma@cinnabarfarms.com
www.cinnabarfarms.com

Farm & Production Location

1980 Richardson Road, Nanaimo, B.C.
 

BluntMoniker

Well-Known Member
What do you guys use as a means of pest prevention when bringing organic compost into an indoors grow?

I've been looking into ROLS since my grow is organic anyway, and I have a nice compost pile outside.. but I've always been told never bring outside, inside, so I'm concerned with the best way to accomplish this without investing my tent.

My compost makeup:
80% Chicken Manure/Pine Shaving (Deep Litter)
10% local soil (from flipping/stirring)
10% misc (crushed clam/oyster/mussel shell, grass clippings, egg shells, chicken feathers, kitchen scraps, used coffee grounds, crushed granite left over from kitchen remodel, diatomaceous earth, perlite, used "sunshine mix #4" from previous grows, EWC from local worms in the compost)

Obviously I dont want to bake the compost and kill off the beneficial microbes in it, but I'd rather find a way to prevent pests rather than react to them after they rear themselves.

Appreciate the responses in advance!
 
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