HG recommends fertilizing Feb., June and September. But Dr. Elaine Ingham's followers spray compost tea four times a year? Do you know the time schedule for the four sprays on pastures?
Pakin,
Thank you. I'm well versed in all those and have been for a long time.
It always amazes people what a difference just adding molasses at a gallon an acres does to the soil. I've been a big time advocate of that for a long time and believe fully that it is one of the best soil amendments for the money. I put it on my soil at least once a month and I'm pretty sure it is a large part of what keeps fire ants out of my yard - and has for the last ten years.
Regarding the fertilizer, I wasn't clear about who I was addressing - Bluestem - as he is an award winning hay farmer. So tell us, Mark, what fertilizer you'd recommend or nutrition combination? Please, share your methods!
Betsy Ross sprays her 500 acres of pasture in the spring at 20 gallons per acre and at 5 g/a for 3 more sprays during the season.
There's a low-till, Panhandle, cotton farmer who sprays molasses at 1 gallon per acre 4 times a season. He's stopped irrigating his crop because his mycorrhiza are holding the water for him.
_________________ David Hall Moderator Dirt Doctor Lawns Forum
Joined: Sat Apr 12, 2003 12:45 am Posts: 420 Location: Whitesboro,TX
I am trying various combinations but I use 1 gal/100gal
of spray of seawater (best source of 92 trace minerals,
amino acids, enzymes, and bacteria from the ocean)
and liquid humates. The first spray this year we added
1 gal/acre of molasses but it was a pain in the neck.
There are so many fines and little chunks that we
stopped up the sprayer screens and had to clean
them 2 or 3 times per 200gal of mix.
I haven't purchased yet but Rem Cor in Howe has new
sprayer tips that will not plug up as much and wind
will not be as big a problem. They (2 left and right)
push the liquid down and out with less getting up in
the air and drifting back on me - thank God I am
not using toxic chemicals, can you imagine what
gets into farmers lungs and on their bodies? The
spread is 24 ft.
Question - compost tea when made is considered a
concentrate, so why would you delute by 3 or 4 to
one and then put 20g/a when you could delute by
2 and put 10 g/a and save work?
Charles Walters has a new book on restoring land
and health from the sea using sea water.
Robert D Bard
Joined: Sat Apr 12, 2003 12:45 am Posts: 420 Location: Whitesboro,TX
Your explanation is the same as mine. I was given
advice from a friend that has been doing compost
tea for some time. Her procedure was to make tea
and dilute it by taking 1 gal of tea to 3 gal of water
and putting 20 gal to the acre and arguing that her
way will not burn the plants, but my way of 1 gal
of tea to 1gal water + a few additives was to strong
and that I would burn the plants. My question is -
did I miss something? I believe my way is the same
concentration with less work (filling the 200 gal
spray rig 1/2 as many times).
Robert D Bard
Joined: Sat Apr 12, 2003 12:45 am Posts: 420 Location: Whitesboro,TX
I have 250 gal of aerated compost tea that I was
supposed to put out on my hay guys meadows
today and he has never got back to me. Is there
any one who wants 250 gal of tea? I sprayed my
land last week and it doesn't need any more for
a while.
Robert D Bard
Joined: Sat Apr 12, 2003 12:45 am Posts: 420 Location: Whitesboro,TX
I have tired various amount of molasses, but 1
gal/acre the "stuff" was plugging up screens and
nozzles 3 to 4 times with 200 gal spray rig. I just
tried putting the molasses in the compost tea and
there was no plugging at all. and nothing in the
bottom of either tank when i was done.
Robert D Bard
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