She said keep it simple but then goes on to talk about organisms and fungi to apply and not to apply that any average person doesn't have a clue about.😂. just give me a brew kit with the compost and directions and call it a day! 😄
'I am looking for a way to add organic matter to feed the fungus in my lawn soil. Has anyone heard of spreading chicken feed layer crumbles on the lawn to increase organic matter? If so, do you think chicken feed(mix of corn, soy, wheat) would be considered a fungal food or bacterial food?
off topic experiment idea: Take a sample of freshly brewed compost tea. Centrifuge. Re-suspend in liquid containing little to no food, but with the dreaded Aminopyralid herbicide. Hoped for result: select out strains of whatever organisms eat Aminopyralid. Perhaps repeat several times. Identify resulting organisms and determine how quickly they eat Aminopyralid. Would they still eat Aminopyralid when they have other food available?
@@caspians582 Good question! It probably depends on the organism. But I know some bacteria survive it. May depend on the number of G's. Any organism still there had to survive the aeration trauma that was "like a rolling boil". The idea is to get rid of most of the liquid. Maybe this could be used to treat a contaminated batch of compost or a garden bed.