Oh, right! Lactic acid, the product of anaerobic respiration! Now calling it the "work horse" makes more sense.
Hi Judi! Thanks for your ideas.
Good one, to distinguish whey from cultured dairy products as opposed to acid or heat coagulated. There would not be the millions of lactobacilli in those, and no telling what they might harbor with so many microbial foods in them.
About the molasses, are you saying it works as well diluted and poured on the ground as if one incubated an oxygenated
compost brew with molasses as the feed? You could create a bloom in the soil with all that food, then a lot of it would die off, leaving the little dead bodies enclosed in nitrogen rich cell membranes. I guess to avoid osmotic shock, it would be important not to put too strong a concentration of molasses. Have you tried it yet, or are you still scheming?
So, do you think one could also use kombucha to inoculate the soil and or the Bokashi ferment?
If anyone is interested the post at
https://permies.com/t/48180/goats/remedies-mosquitos-biting-flies-dairy#386303 mentions EM1 as a spray to decrease fly larvae, and suggests it might work to keep the flies off the goats and the walls of the milk room, and the EM1 is what I searched and stumbled upon bokashi.
The more different sites I visit and read content, the more I think Bokashi is a general term for the anaerobic fermentation composting process, as opposed to a specific set of organisms used in the process.
I wonder has anyone experimented with any of the available products, or with the process of capturing their own indigenous species.
Thekla