List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Sometimes the answer is nothing
Country oriented nerd with primary interests in alternate energy in particular solar. Dabble in gardening, trees, cob, soil building and a host of others.
wayne fajkus wrote:I was always cautious with people suggesting things like adding pine needles for blueberries. It's recommended a lot. It never really made sense in my mind. When you look at acids they want to fizz out. Pour it on the ground and how long does it stay an acid? Not long. Its like an acid doesn't want to be an acid, so it eats stuff til its not. So a little bit of needles added on a lot of soil is gonna fizz out fast.
That was my simple reasoning and may be wrong scientifically, but luckily the answer may have been right.
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.
-Robert A. Heinlein
Chris Kott wrote:This is interesting, and good to know.
What I wonder though, kola Redhawk, is if there are things we can do to enhance the capacity of conifers to acidify the soil. If a copse of conifers, an island of acidity in a sea of alkali, were supplemented with all they needed, would they acidify the surrounding soil, and is there anything that could be done for them, any system put in place or supplementation, that would make them better able to change the surrounding soil to their needs?
I mean, if we had that theoretical copse, and in addition to regular root-zone sub-irrigation, they were fed with, dissolved in their irrigation water or topdressed or whatever, any mineral and/or nutrient precursors necessary for soil acidification, and if they were regularly doused with oxygenated compost extract and fungal slurry, what are the odds that the copse's capacity to acidify the surrounding soil would increase?
-CK
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Chris Kott wrote:This is interesting, and good to know.
... Doesn't alfalfa grow well in slightly alkaline conditions? I know that in the right conditions, it can send taproots down like 6 feet or more. Don't asparagus also like it a bit alkaline?
I think that in that situation, I would probably grow as much of whatever would grow well as possible, chop-and-dropping regularly, pasturing animals on it if possible. The added organic matter would increase the available options.
I think that if I had garden vegetables or crops I was growing on a limited basis, I would do them on hugelbeets.
What I wonder though, kola Redhawk, is if there are things we can do to enhance the capacity of conifers to acidify the soil. If a copse of conifers, an island of acidity in a sea of alkali, were supplemented with all they needed, would they acidify the surrounding soil, and is there anything that could be done for them, any system put in place or supplementation, that would make them better able to change the surrounding soil to their needs?
I mean, if we had that theoretical copse, and in addition to regular root-zone sub-irrigation, they were fed with, dissolved in their irrigation water or topdressed or whatever, any mineral and/or nutrient precursors necessary for soil acidification, and if they were regularly doused with oxygenated compost extract and fungal slurry, what are the odds that the copse's capacity to acidify the surrounding soil would increase?
-CK
Country oriented nerd with primary interests in alternate energy in particular solar. Dabble in gardening, trees, cob, soil building and a host of others.
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
Acidification also occurs when base cations such as calcium, magnesium, potassium and sodium are leached from the soil.
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List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
C. Letellier wrote:
I have killed many hundreds of trees over decades learning that lesson. Since my soil is clay, high salt and high pH the choices are very limited.(PS I am US grow zone 4 borderline zone 3) So far I have 3 evergreens that are making it in my ground. Austrian pine works, Colorado Blue spruce works and a couple of varieties of juniper. Now supposedly white pine, eastern red cedar and lodge pole are supposed to work too but I have killed all of them on a regular basis. Eastern Red cedar I am told is dying from salt damage.
Bryant RedHawk wrote:
I do know that if you want to use conifer duff for the purpose of acidification it is the cambium layer with the resin phylum that you really want to be using.
I did a few tests way back in the 60's of several California species of pines and found that it is the bark and cambium layers that contain the most acidity when compared to leaves or the wood the bark is about 40% more acidic with the cambium but only 15% more acidic without the cambium.
I never make the same mistake twice.
I make it 5 or 6 times to make sure.
List of Bryant RedHawk's Epic Soil Series Threads We love visitors, that's why we live in a secluded cabin deep in the woods. "Buzzard's Roost (Asnikiye Heca) Farm." Promoting permaculture to save our planet.
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