Conradino23 Keeps On Keeping On Outdoor & Indoor Using LOS/High Brix Methods

Composted piss, urea turns into ammonia in water. Hardwood ash is about 10% potassium and about 40% calcium. A small dose of this fertiliser in bloom will go a long way.



Mine is based on a formula developed over the last couple of years. Sesame seed extract + low potassium fish powder + lithothamnium. Nutrients are in carbonate, acetate and amino acid form and they get broken into cations quickly with plenty of bacteria... the smell of this thing :laugh:


This is interesting.

how are you making your lithothamnium soluble?? The urea helps?

I gave some to my wife the other day (edit:not the urea).
She started putting it on her face with water and walking around with it to dry and soak it or something.
I like that look better it than that green stuff she was using. lol!

Urea, I swim in it at the public pool. Good stuff.
If it was bad for us, I'd be dead.
So far so good.
 
This is interesting.

how are you making your lithothamnium soluble?? The urea helps?

I gave some to my wife the other day (edit:not the urea).
She started putting it on her face with water and walking around with it to dry and soak it or something.
I like that look better it than that green stuff she was using. lol!

Urea, I swim in it at the public pool. Good stuff.
If it was bad for us, I'd be dead.
So far so good.


LOL
 
This is interesting.

how are you making your lithothamnium soluble?? The urea helps?

I gave some to my wife the other day (edit:not the urea).
She started putting it on her face with water and walking around with it to dry and soak it or something.
I like that look better it than that green stuff she was using. lol!

Urea, I swim in it at the public pool. Good stuff.
If it was bad for us, I'd be dead.
So far so good.

Lithothamnium is insoluble in water as it's mostly calcium carbonate, so you give work to bacteria here.

A bit of piss never killed anyone :laugh:

I have to add I experimented a lot with this mixture in the past and had very good results particularly with Afghani plants. It's a very strong fertiliser, so right dosing is necessary. This time I settled on a tbs of ash per plant and I just gave it to Bubbas. Two other plants have been doing just fine, so no push was necessary.

More info: Sustainable Fertilizer: Urine And Wood Ash Produce Large Harvest


Yeah that's what I was thinking :laugh:
 
I even gave myself a good laugh there

Thanks Con.

I've been making my own pot-ash in the garden with bamboo leaves and dried shoots I dont use for stakes.

My neighbors called the fire department the last time lol

Was funny, I lit a very small pile, stood there with a watering can and waited......

Sure enough sirens. When the fire truck pulled up I was watering the tiny fire with my watering can. Should have been pissing on it! lol Had I known!

"Hi fellas - just making a little pot-ash here." Blank looks all around.

The soil actually really improved almost right away - I was in a raised bed that was fallow. I was having issues with tomatoes and blossom end rot last few years.
 
I even gave myself a good laugh there

Thanks Con.

I've been making my own pot-ash in the garden with bamboo leaves and dried shoots I dont use for stakes.

My neighbors called the fire department the last time lol

Was funny, I lit a very small pile, stood there with a watering can and waited......

Sure enough sirens. When the fire truck pulled up I was watering the tiny fire with my watering can. Should have been pissing on it! lol Had I known!

"Hi fellas - just making a little pot-ash here." Blank looks all around.

The soil actually really improved almost right away - I was in a raised bed that was fallow. I was having issues with tomatoes and blossom end rot last few years.

You make me laugh :laugh:

Does it matter what kind of wood you use for ash? I've seen bamboo mentioned several places, but that's something I don't have on hand.

Calcium and potassium and other content changes depending on the material you burn, but they'll all work.
 
Looking beautiful as always Con. She looks happy in her new home.
You make me laugh :laugh:



Calcium and potassium and other content changes depending on the material you burn, but they'll all work.
Thank you. I need to feed my garden and this crossed my mind as an option. Lots of tomatos and peppers this year.
:p
 
Thx man.

Yeah wood ash will work very well for your vegetables, just dose it properly :)
 
1-2 tbs.
 
Yes it is, I've used it myself :)
 
Yeah don’t go overboard, especially outside. You wanna make a difference, but without being excessive.
 
If you have time definitely!
 
Hey man, thx a lot :surf:
 
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