New Grower The Basics ( very basic ) of organic growing for begginers

Soil

As we know, there are many types of soil, and we need to know what's best for growing our plants in. If your going to growing in soil and do so organically, what do you really need? How much do we really need to do to get quality soil? I'll not give your soil breakdown info, there are thousands of pages out there on that. We will work with premixed soils for a starting base.

Soil for growing is really comprised of a base mix, and an admix.
potting soil is a base mix. Its loam ( hopefully... ), a little humus and a filler meant to hold air and water.
An ad mix is the added fillers and nutrients we amend the soil with such as kelp meal and lime.

What should we use as a base mix? Well, we could mix our own from scratch, using sand, clay, humus, and compost. But really, getting a base mix just right is a lot of work and time consuming to boot. There are many brands of potting soil available, find one that works for you and stick with it. Its like buying flower for baking, its all pretty much the same! You could buy a mold and cast your own concrete blocks to build a structure with, but why bother? The same with base soil. I buy 30 quart bags of potting soil for $3.00 a bag, and its not the crap you find at Lowes either! Its good, clean, bug free soil from Canada and I'm tempted to buy a truck load and resell it! FoxFarm, etc has nothing on this soil!

When it comes to the admix that things get complicated. There are dozens and dozens of viable organic ingredients you can use. All of them work, some better than other. Some work fast, some are moderately slow, some very slow, some so slow your wasting you money buying them( greensand, Glacial dust, etc, unless you plan to live 500 years or so to see the results.... ).

You can buy premixed, dry, organic nutrients. They can save you a lot of work and some money too! Buying each component you will use can become expensive and buying them in small quantities is even more so when you factor in shipping or time and fuel to fetch them. So if your growing a few plant in small to medium containers, is probably more effective to buy boxed nutrients. Grow More
( 2/25/2021 - It's gotten hard to find the GrowMore organics sadly ) Doctor Earth, and Jobe's, are the most common brands. They sell ready to use mixes as well as small boxes of individual nutrients and suplements. I use Grow More Organic Soil builder, and Organic Flower and Bloom. I also use their " Palm Food" blend. Its still the same organic matter, in a slightly different ratio, and my plants love it just as much as the other, so buy what you can find and don't worry about it! I use Jobe's organic spikes also when I find them on sale, my house plants love them!

However, making your own ad mix is worthwhile also, especially if your growing more than a couple plants. There are dozens of formulas you can follow, I'm not listing them here. However, as typical of people, they can get very complicated. I personally don't believe organics should be complicated. Nature likes diversity, but it also likes elegant simplicity. So I've been working on my "KISS", I'm looking to make to simplest mix I can that remains effective, with little or no further additive generally required. I've also moved to using coco coir as a medium in place of peat. I'm trying to greatly reduce, and maybe eliminate peat from my soils. Peat moss is NOT a renewable resource, it takes hundreds of years for a peat bog to grow!
Now I understand that currently, almost all affordable mixes use peat, there's no escaping it. But I'm a firm believer in recycling soil so each recycle reduces the amount of remaining peat.I'll get into my mix shortly.

PH control in organic soil ( or any soil ) should start at the admix level! Fix it BEFORE you ever plant a seed or clone, and it should not ever be a problem that you even need to think about if your water is good. And here's the crux of the problem. Lime is the key to soil PH moderation. BUT, I've personally read at least 10 different recommendations on how much to use! So that is a part I'm experimenting with in my mixes. Lime not only acts as a ph buffer, it also provides calcium and sometimes magnesium also. A properly limed and cooked soil should never have a calcium problem. Too much lime however, can make the soil ph run high when too much is used. I think I've found the best starting point advice from the author Read Spear, in his book: "Small Spaces, Big Yields." This may be the best book on the market for beginning growers. He recommends lime be added as 10% OF THE ADMIX, not of te soil. I'll include his base formulas at the end.

Magnesium. Critical for your plant as its a component of Chlorophyll. There are several ways to include it. I think the best may be by adding Epsom Salts to the mix. Just as with Lime, the adequate amount is often hard to find in online information. I'll be using 5% of the admix as a base for testing. Again, I'm finding using an admix formula is easier for controlling what goes into your soil than mixing everything into the base. I believe this also makes blending your soil easier and more uniform in the final mix.

Not matter how good our mixes are though, issues will pop up, plants do what they want to do, they are worse than my children.........LOL! Some are always going to be finicky, other will grow in toxic waste... My point is, we will need to have a couple of nutrients available. NPK, the three key nutrients make up 90% of all nutrient problems in any soil. Some plants are just hogs and will take almost all you can throw at them. Most are not like that though. Still, good soil is partly science and partly an art you learn by doing, and plants don't read science books, that's what makes them so un-cooperative at times.....

Sometimes, just adding a little of your admix as a top dressing will be all you need, or even better, fresh worm castings! I feel that you should also keep a few items in case of deficiencies. Blood meal for FAST doses of N, kelp meal for K, molasses or alfalfa meal for P, lime and Epsom salts or Cal/Mag for calcium and magnesium. Use these if you see definite signs of deficiency. N in particular is easy to spot.

Mixes:

My current mixes:

Base:

Update: 2/25/2021 I've modified my mix slightly. Either mix will work fine I just like my new mix better.

Old Mix
30% coco coir
50% potting soil
10% cow manure
10% peat

New Mix
20% coco coir
70% organic potting soil
10 cow or horse manure ( composted )

Admix:
60% worm castings
5% Jobe's , Dr. Earth, etc
5% blood meal
10% dolomite lime ( fine ground is best )
15% chicken manure ( or a blend of Bat guano and Seabird guano )
5% epsom salts

KISS MIX:

60% worm castings
20% boxed " super soil" nutrients, Jobe's Doctor Earth, etc
10% lime
10% epsom salts

Read Spear's mixes:

Base:
35% coco
25% perlite
25% peat
15% compost

Admix:
40% composted manure
25% topsoil ( the real stuff, black and fine grained )
10% Dolomite Lime
10% Gypsum
5% Bone meal
5% blood meal
5% azomite
mix 2 parts base to one part admix. Cook for 2 weeks to 30 days if mixing large batches, for a gallon or two, just a few days for the lime to work is all that's needed. The KISS mix you can use right away!

Don't get the idea I'm an organic expert, I'm certainly not! But, I do my homework always and never trust just one source! I am however, on a quest as always to sort out the bullshit from the good information. I hope this will give beginners a place to start on the path to good organics!
 
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Jobe's make excellent products in the organic line. In fact, I'm going to do a grow with just organic potting soil and Jobe's organic spikes just to see how well they could work for someone on a very tight budget
Should be interesting and I bet you will get good results.
 
Update:

I've been using small variations of these mixes for a while now and I've found the best super simple mixes work the best! I've upped the N a bit yet still wellwithin a level your plants will tolerate.
My new mix is:

Base mix, Equal parts:
coco coir
organic potting soil
composted cow manure

cow manure provides low amounts of N and some micro nutrients and contributes to the soil structure. Hell, you could grow in straight composted cow ( or any type ) manure. Use coco coir instead of peat, coco is a renewable resource, peat is not!

Admix:
30% worm castings
30% composted chicken manure
15% azomite
20% recycled soil
5 % dolomite or garden lime
1/2 cup blood meal

1 part admix to 4 parts base soil.

Of course you could add other ingredients like kelp and alfalfa, or, boxed organic nutrients such as Grow More or Jobes, doctor Earth, etc. With my mix, I don't feel the need.
When I say ad recycled soil, I mean soil that has not been previously recycled or has not been recycled more than twice. Soil will become depleted of nutrients, especially the micro nutrients. I now have started amending and cooking my recycled soil separately and cook for longer times. 60-90 days. By adding just a small amount of coco coir to it after cooking you can use it as your ready to go mix! Soil never wears out, it just breaks down into smaller and smaller particle, which is how humus and clay come about. Adding coco rebuilds the structure of the soil repairing the water and air retention properties.

Next post I'll give you a recipe for recycled soil.
 
Update:

I've been using small variations of these mixes for a while now and I've found the best super simple mixes work the best! I've upped the N a bit yet still wellwithin a level your plants will tolerate.
My new mix is:

Base mix, Equal parts:
coco coir
organic potting soil
composted cow manure

cow manure provides low amounts of N and some micro nutrients and contributes to the soil structure. Hell, you could grow in straight composted cow ( or any type ) manure. Use coco coir instead of peat, coco is a renewable resource, peat is not!

Admix:
30% worm castings
30% composted chicken manure
15% azomite
20% recycled soil
5 % dolomite or garden lime
1/2 cup blood meal

1 part admix to 4 parts base soil.

Of course you could add other ingredients like kelp and alfalfa, or, boxed organic nutrients such as Grow More or Jobes, doctor Earth, etc. With my mix, I don't feel the need.
When I say ad recycled soil, I mean soil that has not been previously recycled or has not been recycled more than twice. Soil will become depleted of nutrients, especially the micro nutrients. I now have started amending and cooking my recycled soil separately and cook for longer times. 60-90 days. By adding just a small amount of coco coir to it after cooking you can use it as your ready to go mix! Soil never wears out, it just breaks down into smaller and smaller particle, which is how humus and clay come about. Adding coco rebuilds the structure of the soil repairing the water and air retention properties.

Next post I'll give you a recipe for recycled soil.
I like to use my spent manure based bulk mushroom substrate as an additive to my recycled soil ;-)
 
Yes good stuff from what I've read!
I've always kept cow manure around for my fungi friends, I've found when I added just straight sun leeched manure to my soils it was on some occasions problematic. It's like it would make soil too nitrogen rich as a noob could never seem to get the ration soil/manure in the sweet spot, but when I use manure after I've grown the mushrooms in it I get amazing results and I've even experimented and had beans pop in it. If any wish to use here's a suggestion buy some mushroom compost allow it to sit in the sun in a pillowcase for about 2weeks then place in 5 gallon bucket with lid, cover with about 1-3 gallons of BOILING water let sit 12-24 hrs then with still in pillowcase squeeze the hell out of it,,,,,,,,,, you want to talk about an awesome additive ;-) ;-)
 
I've always kept cow manure around for my fungi friends, I've found when I added just straight sun leeched manure to my soils it was on some occasions problematic. It's like it would make soil too nitrogen rich as a noob could never seem to get the ration soil/manure in the sweet spot, but when I use manure after I've grown the mushrooms in it I get amazing results and I've even experimented and had beans pop in it. If any wish to use here's a suggestion buy some mushroom compost allow it to sit in the sun in a pillowcase for about 2weeks then place in 5 gallon bucket with lid, cover with about 1-3 gallons of BOILING water let sit 12-24 hrs then with still in pillowcase squeeze the hell out of it,,,,,,,,,, you want to talk about an awesome additive ;-) ;-)
You adding straw to your mushie mix too I hope. I've noticed too that if you use spent woodlover casings in other flower/garden patches and such they do amazing, so i wonder what would happen if a few chips from some old wood lovers are thrown in the admix (like maybe a handful in that pillow case with the manure and (probably) straw).
 
what your doing is composting, plain and simple. Its the action of fungi and bacteria that break down the various organic matter, including manures, into useable compost. I accomplish the same thing using worm farming as its much faster than composting in piles, etc. fresh manures should never be used on plants as its possible to transmit diseases that way. What's interesting is red worms ( compost worms ) are able to not only reduce disease vectors, they can also breakdown toxic chemicals! And the worms don't "eat' the materials being composted, they eat the bacteria that beakdown the materials, and their digestive tract bacteria complete the process. This is why worm castings are such a superior soil amendment. they shorten the composting process from 6-12 months to 60-90 days, and produce a cleaner, safer compost! Throw some of your mushroom compost into a worm bin with other organic matter, they'll turn it into something even better!


I've always kept cow manure around for my fungi friends, I've found when I added just straight sun leeched manure to my soils it was on some occasions problematic. It's like it would make soil too nitrogen rich as a noob could never seem to get the ration soil/manure in the sweet spot, but when I use manure after I've grown the mushrooms in it I get amazing results and I've even experimented and had beans pop in it. If any wish to use here's a suggestion buy some mushroom compost allow it to sit in the sun in a pillowcase for about 2weeks then place in 5 gallon bucket with lid, cover with about 1-3 gallons of BOILING water let sit 12-24 hrs then with still in pillowcase squeeze the hell out of it,,,,,,,,,, you want to talk about an awesome additive ;-) ;-)
 
what your doing is composting, plain and simple. Its the action of fungi and bacteria that break down the various organic matter, including manures, into useable compost. I accomplish the same thing using worm farming as its much faster than composting in piles, etc. fresh manures should never be used on plants as its possible to transmit diseases that way. What's interesting is red worms ( compost worms ) are able to not only reduce disease vectors, they can also breakdown toxic chemicals! And the worms don't "eat' the materials being composted, they eat the bacteria that beakdown the materials, and their digestive tract bacteria complete the process. This is why worm castings are such a superior soil amendment. they shorten the composting process from 6-12 months to 60-90 days, and produce a cleaner, safer compost! Throw some of your mushroom compost into a worm bin with other organic matter, they'll turn it into something even better!
I have often wondered about adding worms. We fish in the spring/summer anyway always wanted to get a kiddie pool and breed my own nightcrawlers and or redworms, oh so many projects so little time. I don't guess worms would survive if you throw some in with your plants or do they, would soil tempds be too warm, would nutes upset them, etc.
 

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