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Bokashi for beginners: what is it, and what can it do for me?

floral

Member
Anybody still reading this thread?

I make my own bokashi bran, using bulk wheat bran or rice hulls as the carbon source.

Works great, but I am puzzled about how to dry it. If the microbes are sensitive to heat and prefer an anaerobic environment, that seems to eliminate heat and air as drying methods, and without heat and air... how am I supposed to dry it? Yet you're not supposed to keep undried stuff for more than a couple weeks, right?

Thus far I have just been using the wet stuff in our bucket, and using way more than is necessary in order to exhaust my supply before a few weeks elapses.

Love EM-1 and Bokashi, but the fact that it's SEKRIT PROPRIETARY TECHNOLOGY makes it a PITA at times.
 
Anybody still reading this thread?

I make my own bokashi bran, using bulk wheat bran or rice hulls as the carbon source.

Works great, but I am puzzled about how to dry it. If the microbes are sensitive to heat and prefer an anaerobic environment, that seems to eliminate heat and air as drying methods, and without heat and air... how am I supposed to dry it? Yet you're not supposed to keep undried stuff for more than a couple weeks, right?

Thus far I have just been using the wet stuff in our bucket, and using way more than is necessary in order to exhaust my supply before a few weeks elapses.

Love EM-1 and Bokashi, but the fact that it's SEKRIT PROPRIETARY TECHNOLOGY makes it a PITA at times.

Get yourself a tarp maybe 8 x 8 and spread it out on a nice sunny day. A full day in the sun is plenty of dry time. Remember to agitate it a few times through out the day. If it is still moist don't worry it will still store fine at around 20 to 25 percent moisture. I believe that a bit of moisture helps its in storage. I have my bran in a 5 gallon bucket for 6 months now and it is as good as day one. If it smells like cider vinegar your all good.
 
I just buried a full bucket that sat in my yard all summer 3 to 4 months many 90 degree plus days. I wonder if it will still compost like it should. I swear i could still smell it and I buried it 1.5 feet down. I must say that the Bokashi compost was a bit scary when you first uncover it after 8 or 10 weeks. The pile is infested with insects millipedes, worms, potato bugs, all sorts of creepy crawly stuff. It almost looks like the pile is breathing. I couldn't bring this stuff into my indoor worn bin way too much foreign bug life. But it is some of the richest compost I have seen. I just left it buried within proximity to my vegetable plot. It is amazing how lobster and crab shell can breakdown in such a quick time. I would figure around a 90% full material breakdown. Still saw a couple of orange peel pieces. I'm curious if anyone has ever treated their plant waste material with Bokashi bran. Throw it in a garbage bag and let it rest for a month or so.
 

floral

Member
Get yourself a tarp maybe 8 x 8 and spread it out on a nice sunny day. A full day in the sun is plenty of dry time.

Isn't sunlight anti-microbial? And isn't fresh air not the optimal environment for anaerobic microbes? That was the point of my initial post, if it was unclear. I know *how* to dry things in the sun, but since both sun and air seem inhospitable to the microbial life I'm trying to cultivate on the bokashi bran, I am wondering how else to dry it.
 

rrog

Active member
Veteran
Everyone dries it and it all works, so after a month of fermenting I figure the bacteria is safely inside the bran, hidden from UV.

I've been to several Bokashi sites and they all just lay it out to dry.
 

rrog

Active member
Veteran
I see videos where after 30-60 day bran fermentation, they lay out on a tarp and dry like coffee beans
 

ClackamasCootz

Expired
Veteran
Everyone dries it and it all works, so after a month of fermenting I figure the bacteria is safely inside the bran, hidden from UV.

I've been to several Bokashi sites and they all just lay it out to dry.
rrog

Microbeman really knows his stuff on the EM-1 deal as well as from other sources like Vinnie Pinto, et al. and I believe that when he creates the AEM he uses light for the development of the PNSB strains (Purple Non-Sulfur Bacteria) that are included in various versions of EM-1 - specifically the agriculture formulas.

CC
 

rrog

Active member
Veteran
I read a couple of great posts from MM where he described the difficulty of making your own EM-1.

I'm trying my hand at this and thought I'd just collect locally dominant strains and make a simple LAB serum to inoculate the bran. My understanding is that my locally acquired EM will work to at least get the process started, then the indigenous soil microbes finish it.

That's my hope, anyway. Does MM sell the stuff?
 

rrog

Active member
Veteran
You are the link-master. Wow. I will digest. Thank you.

I purchased Gil Carandang's book titled "Grow Your Own Beneficial Indigenous Microorganisms and Bionutrients In Natural Farming." I'd like to make my own EM
 
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Isn't sunlight anti-microbial? And isn't fresh air not the optimal environment for anaerobic microbes? That was the point of my initial post, if it was unclear. I know *how* to dry things in the sun, but since both sun and air seem inhospitable to the microbial life I'm trying to cultivate on the bokashi bran, I am wondering how else to dry it.

You make good points, but my Bokashi bran is awesome and I dried it in the sun on a 85 degree day. My Bokashi turned crab and lobster shells into great compost in 8 weeks.....Peace and good luck. I am not a scientist but I play one on the internet....just like most ya'll.
 

rrog

Active member
Veteran
Interesting CC. So if the newspaper could replace bran, it seems that it could be simply shredded and added along with coffee grounds and french fries.
 
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