I'm wondering for the same reasons. I hadn't considered alternating though...I think I'll try that out.
This is a piece of organic matter at 800x from a 1ml sample from an actively aerating brewer. On this and seeing them bugs in action, I believe those dots attached to it(and the peppering of dots through the rest of the field) to be fungus. I saw a few bacteria(and you can make one out in this image as well) but those were rare in this sample. In scanning the entire slide, I found a whopping total of 4 diatoms, probably picked up from the blackwater aquarium water I used as the base (I don't dose my tank with anything but peat, red alder cones and Indian almond leaves).
Water out of my tap is gH 30 ppm and pH 8.2 prior to chloramine treatment with a trace dosing of potassium metabisulfate. When I pitch my ingredients, the pH of the water from the tank is 7 and gH is 10-12 ppm. At the end of the session, my pH is around 6.4
Cheers! I'm going to make my own thread soon, as soon as I can parse down my weird notes into a methodology development kind of design document.
Very cool, I know I'll get into microscopes one day eventually... I almost invested in one 2 months ago but decided to build bigger pots instead because I'm not quite at that level yet. I was gonna order MM's cd on identifying organisms under the scope - it looks like a lot of fun being able to see that other world that's invisible to the human eye. I can imagine how nice it must be to simply pop a drop of tea under the scope to see if it's time to harvest or not.
If you make a thread I'll be one of the first to pull up a chair, I can tell ya that...
I have been lurking for some time, but I just wanted to say that I have learned so much from your posts TM. Thank you for sharing your knowledge, but also providing links to other posts/websites etc. and providing a place for other knowledgable people to chime in.
I have been stuck in my rut for some time, but I hope to slowly move out of it and into a program like this. I am curious about how your system changes for different flowering lengths? Say a strain that gets out into that 12-14 week and beyond category? Also, this is the child in me asking, but how do your yield efficiencies(g/watt) compare to previous methods?
Thanks dude, glad you joined the site, welcome
No problem, I learn a lot myself by just explaining how I do things and why... so it's def a win win. I love learning about growing, it feels like an addiction - I'm literally up at night reading until I nod off into my screen practically lol
No till can support any cultivar no matter it's flowering length - I had some girls going until day 84 last run with no problems or shortages in food. There's something called a cation (cat-eye-on) exchange capacity, and organic matter has a high % of it. What this means is that it has the ability to hold onto nutrients more efficiently and longer, and prevent the typical leeching seen in soilless mixes that are low in CEC. So when we have an organic soil mix that's typically equal parts peat, aeration, and compost... that mix is going to hold onto nutrients and store them for you just as nature does in wild forests.
In the forest a tree falls, begins to decompose by the means of fungi and bacteria, then becomes food for the next generation of plants that grow in that open patch of canopy. No tilling, yet nutrients are never depleted and nobody ever has to run out there and fertilize... yet health is very high among those plants. We're putting the same principals into practice here, once harvest comes we chop the plant, drop leaves and stems and stalks onto the top of the soil, and let it do it's thing just as you would see outside. You'll never have to worry about lengthy flowering varieties again!
As far as yield goes - I've never had heavier weight come out of that room before in my 8 years of growing with ebb and flow tables, coco coir, tga super soil, or soilless mixes. Last run I ran all testers and still reached 979g under 1200 watts. Some were like 2' tall, while others were 5' so a lot of fluctuation but the keepers I kept all packed on weight very well compared to previous methods. I'll easily reach that 1 gpw with keeper phenos this run, maybe even 2 gpw if I have a good run:
Silver Lotus #1
Silver Lotus #2
You can see some of the scragglers to the left there... it seems like the strains that were bred by organic breeders performed a lot better than the TG Genetic strains I ran. I wasn't too happy with TG's gear, a lot of it was sub-par unfortunately but I found a keeper Sicilian Revenge so it was worth it I think.
I think you should dive into no-till, take that shit to the next level!