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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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The Walrus Compost Tek
    #7544041 - 10/21/07 06:55 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

So I am considering my first grow soon and decided that I want to use compost as a substrate. Not only for mushrooms but I have many houseplants that will benefit from a home made compost. I am making this post not so much a tek as it is more of an experiment than anything. I would like anyone to chime in and help with composting tips too. This is what I've got some far.


I figured a suitable composting container to be a rubbermaid trashcan with a locking lid. These babies are tough and can take a serious beating, which will be very important in the mixing process.



Now I need ingredients to compost with. I went down to some local stables and filled a 10 gallon rubbermaid with some nice HPOO


Needed some more organics so I went down to starbucks and got some of the "Grounds for your Garden". On the way home I saw a pumpkin patch too and figured I could get an ugly one or two for cheap. Instead they gave me some already rotten ones for free. Big time score.




I did my best to pulverize the pumpkins in with some dry leaves and grass to add some brown ingredients to the mix.




Put all those things in my trash can and found the easiest way to mix was to just kick the sum bitch all around the yard.



Also decided to add a bit of gypsum (drywall) to keep it a tad on the no greasy side of things.

Now I needed to fill this can full of holes in order to get proper ventilation for the composting cycle to be fully up to speed. I Drilled about 20 or some holes in the bottom for good drainage and many holes evenly spaced all around the sides. This allows for gases to escape as well as to ensure the compost doesn't turn too soupy.



Had to go old school after the cordless battery died.


And the finished composting bin.


I filled the bin with water until I started to see water coming out of the bottom holes.


Tied a rope on the locks so the lid wouldn't come apart and I gave it one last tumble and this is the final product to begin composting.




Now I know that shit gets soggy when things breakdown down so I decided to fab up a catch pan using a new oil drain pan so save these nutrient rich goodies that will drip out for later use.





And here she sits in her final resting place on the side of my house where it will get plenty of sun to help with the composting process.



I plan on checking temperature and moisture levels every few days and given it a turning to ensure things are properly mixed still.

I hope this turns out good, let me know what you guys think!


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Invisiblejeetered
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7544056 - 10/21/07 06:59 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

that looks pretty sweet to me!!!

the tea is magnificent for your lawn and garden too!

nice write up!

+5 for you!

I really have no tips for you other then make sure everything stays turned well.

Keep us posted!


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: jeetered]
    #7544087 - 10/21/07 07:05 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Thanks for the kind words jeetered. Yeah I can imagine the tea being good, shit it almost looks good enough to drink.:crazy2:



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Offlinesyntroniks
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7544211 - 10/21/07 07:29 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

mmmmmmmmm, now THAT's recycling. I'm sure you can grow plenty of crazy shrooms on that stuff!


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Invisiblemycocurious
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7544214 - 10/21/07 07:29 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

In my humble opinion... you're going to need to throw in some more browns (leaves, straw, newspaper, cardboard, etc.) because you have a ton of greens in there at the moment and it might get super stinky (ammonia) as such...


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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InvisibleOgla
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7544221 - 10/21/07 07:31 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Yeah, i had made my own compost for my tobacco grow and found myself putting it aside for mushrooms. It is a mix of Coir, Vermiculite, compost, 2-3 dozen banana peels, strawberries, Cow and Horse dung. Can't wait to use it.


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Offlinesyntroniks
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: mycocurious]
    #7544224 - 10/21/07 07:32 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Does poo count as green or brown because I can see it being ammonia rich


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Offlinemeatcakeman
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7544238 - 10/21/07 07:34 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

for a second there i thought you were gonna use walrus :poop::poop:


--------------------
大开眼界

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Hasta siempre, comandante.
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Invisiblemycocurious
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: syntroniks]
    #7544319 - 10/21/07 07:51 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

syntroniks said:
Does poo count as green or brown because I can see it being ammonia rich




All poo is a mixture of greens and browns but fresh poo is much more green than brown...once it's be aged a couple months it becomes more of a brown. And the coffee grounds and the pumpkin would also be green.


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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InvisibleOgla
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: mycocurious]
    #7544591 - 10/21/07 08:50 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

i find it hard to believe that you've been registered with the shroomery since 2003 and haven't done a grow yet. :crazy: I guess good luck with everything


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: mycocurious]
    #7544747 - 10/21/07 09:31 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

mycocurious said:
In my humble opinion... you're going to need to throw in some more browns (leaves, straw, newspaper, cardboard, etc.) because you have a ton of greens in there at the moment and it might get super stinky (ammonia) as such...




Thanks for the info. Is there any brown which you feel is superior? I have an over abundance of all of those things you suggested. Also, how will I know if my moisture content is spot on?


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Ogla]
    #7544762 - 10/21/07 09:34 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

losfreddy said:
i find it hard to believe that you've been registered with the shroomery since 2003 and haven't done a grow yet. :crazy: I guess good luck with everything




I've been more into hunting, just now getting started in cultivating my own.


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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7544792 - 10/21/07 09:41 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

i'm very interested in compost right now and plan on starting my own soon for the spring...


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Invisiblemycocurious
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7546061 - 10/22/07 08:53 AM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

Walrus_Infested said:
Quote:

mycocurious said:
In my humble opinion... you're going to need to throw in some more browns (leaves, straw, newspaper, cardboard, etc.) because you have a ton of greens in there at the moment and it might get super stinky (ammonia) as such...




Thanks for the info. Is there any brown which you feel is superior? I have an over abundance of all of those things you suggested. Also, how will I know if my moisture content is spot on?




The mantra of composting is to use whatever is handy and would otherwise be wasted however, for premium content, I prefer fallen leaves and neighbors will be happy to give them to you for free if you don't have any large trees on your lot. Just make sure to go through the trouble of shredding them first with a lawnmower, leaf-blower (if it doubles as a bagged shredder) or some other kind of chipper/shredder of some sort.

Also, there is a lot of misinformation that if the contents of your compost are acidic then your compost, too, will be acidic - especially in regards to oak leaves and/or pine needles and this is fundamentally untrue. Although, I wouldn't recommend using pine needles, or any form of an evergreen/cedar in your compost because many of those species contain natural anti-fungals in their sap.

---
If you go the newspaper route, The easiest way to shred them down into manageable chunks is to wet them up and then mix them up with a paddle-whip drill bit or by hand until they shred up. You can pour the whole sloshy mix into the the compost if you'd like, but I tend to drain it out first because I monitor my moisture in my compost as almost as carefully as my substrates. Both require precisely the same amount of water in terms of "field-capacity".

Finally, one last tip. A great way to "kick-start" the decomposition process in your compost is to take a couple shovel-fulls of healthy soil from a nearby garden bed and mix it in thoroughly with your compost. This is effectively "spawning" the right bacterial and fungal microbes into the compost to begin colonizing and decomposing it. Once you have some actively composting compost, you can use that instead to kick-start your next batch.


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: mycocurious]
    #7546517 - 10/22/07 11:44 AM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Thanks for all the help mycocurious +5 Shrooms to you!

I just added some more alot of leaves with an unavoidle amount of pine needles too. I live in georgia and it's impossible to not get them in anything. Added a bit of newpaper too, I have a paper shredder so it was no problem. Here is my current batch as of today:


Can you suggest a good tool to mix with? I've been using a pitch fork and a hoe, but neither can get down to more than half way of the bin.


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InvisibleSlimz
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7546543 - 10/22/07 11:51 AM (16 years, 3 months ago)

yeah.. tie the lid back on and kick the sum bitch around sumore


--------------------
Lazy Drywall Tek (no powdery mess)

This series will blow your mind and confirm what you already know to be true.
The Pharmacratic Inquisition
Best Thread Ever ! ! !

:pm: me if you have questions about lasers

Although i may advise others in a general way regarding all types of mushroom grows, and may even post question from other forums about growing "active" mushrooms, i only grow non-"active" mushrooms and edibles.

FeelFamily resident tech guru


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Slimz]
    #7546719 - 10/22/07 12:34 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

Slimz said:
yeah.. tie the lid back on and kick the sum bitch around sumore




That was easy before I added the water, but that bitch is fuckin heavy now.

Rolling around a 100 pound trash can is about as cool as aids.

I wonder if I can ram a mini rototiller in that bitch, cool as hell, but i bet shit would be flying everywhere.


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Invisiblemycocurious
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7547018 - 10/22/07 01:56 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

It's a real PITA when you fill it up more than halfway, huh? The best option would be to empty into a wheel-barrow, mix it up and shovel it back in. Still a huge PITA but if the garbage can can't take the strain of being rolled around it's pretty much your only option.

As for tools, google a "garden claw" almost all hardware stores carry them and they're very handy for something like this...

---
By the way, lay off the watering for a week or so, if you have drainage on the bottom it's too wet. It only needs to be about as wet as a damp sponge in the center of the pile - or in other words, "field capacity".

Lastly, unless your collecting the leachate of the bin so that it won't ruin the area you're storing the composter, I wouldn't be attempting to save that stuff. It's very icky icky and while in small quantities it can bolster the local "soil-food-web" (google the term for more info) too much of it can have the opposite effect and turn the area of your garden into a slimy, smelly sludge.

Just remember, quintessentially it's the same nasty drip you smell off the back of a garbage truck... not to be mistaken for compost_tea which is something wholly different altogether.


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: mycocurious]
    #7547113 - 10/22/07 02:21 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

mycocurious said:

Lastly, unless your collecting the leachate of the bin so that it won't ruin the area you're storing the composter, I wouldn't be attempting to save that stuff. It's very icky icky and while in small quantities it can bolster the local "soil-food-web" (google the term for more info) too much of it can have the opposite effect and turn the area of your garden into a slimy, smelly sludge.

Just remember, quintessentially it's the same nasty drip you smell off the back of a garbage truck... not to be mistaken for compost_tea which is something wholly different altogether.




Ok I'm glad you told me this, because I thought that WAS the compost tea. Whats the differences here? Can I super-dilute the shit thats coming out now and water plants with it?


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Offlineresptodd
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7547134 - 10/22/07 02:27 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Rid the pine needles. the acidity will kill. Just take a look underneath a pine tree, see anything living?


--------------------
Damn! I'm having fun! Just keep the GD monkeys away.


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: resptodd]
    #7547166 - 10/22/07 02:32 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

resptodd said:
Rid the pine needles. the acidity will kill. Just take a look underneath a pine tree, see anything living?




Ever hunted Psilocybe Weilii? I find those bitches under pine trees and pine needles all day long.


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Invisiblemycocurious
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: resptodd]
    #7547189 - 10/22/07 02:37 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

resptodd said:
Rid the pine needles. the acidity will kill. Just take a look underneath a pine tree, see anything living?




Like I said in my earlier post, there is a lot of misinformation regarding the composting of pine needles and oak leaves and their acidity. The pine needles will be just fine in your compost and won't effect the acidity one bit, I promise.

Resptodd, while the area under your pine tree might be on the slightly acidic side if you tested it, it would not be from the pine needles, it would be because the soil was naturally acidic there to begin with... Acidification does not translate readily from decomposing matter to the soil. Whatever organisms that decompose the pine needles - and they do decompose very++ slowly - will neutralize the pH as it digests them.

The main reason grass does not grow under evergreens is because they produce too much shade and the needles encourage rapid soil compaction of the underneath it's branches - which prevents all but the most hardiest of shade-tolerant grasses from growing.


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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Invisiblemycocurious
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7547214 - 10/22/07 02:45 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

Walrus_Infested said:
Quote:

mycocurious said:
Just remember, quintessentially it's the same nasty drip you smell off the back of a garbage truck... not to be mistaken for compost_tea which is something wholly different altogether.




Ok I'm glad you told me this, because I thought that WAS the compost tea. Whats the differences here? Can I super-dilute the shit thats coming out now and water plants with it?




This link will answer all your questions...
Compost Tea Basics <-- a great forum for composting, by the way...

But ultimately I would consider that leachate to be rather bio-hazardous considering it's the drainage of a fresh manure. Ultimately, it's sewage...


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: mycocurious]
    #7547285 - 10/22/07 03:02 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Mycocurious...You are officially a kickass mofo. Thanks for all your help.

Check this out i just found this and I was thinking about getting one of these, it looks like a sweet deal on a good product.


http://www.alwaysbrilliant.com/aa/aspx-products/1-1192/2-52260/SC-FROOGLE/bb/Compost%20Aerator.htm


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OfflineWeilii Nelson
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7548443 - 10/22/07 07:16 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

You should add some human feces to make your concoction even more diverse. But remember it helps to get a little stool on your thumb!


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Offlineacommunistspy
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek *DELETED* [Re: Weilii Nelson]
    #7548600 - 10/22/07 07:47 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Post deleted by acommunistspy

Reason for deletion: this never happened



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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: acommunistspy]
    #7549327 - 10/22/07 10:08 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

I would guess that making worm castings is a different process because an active compost pile can heat up to 150 degrees sometimes. I bet worms wouldnt take to kindly to that.


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Offlinegmuralid
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7549393 - 10/22/07 10:25 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Usually its only the core of the compost that reaches those temps, and thats where thermophilic bacteria break it down, which is the reason you need to turn the compost often.

IMO I think worms would be fine, coz they will stay in areas that arent too hot, and will produce little babies quickly when you start clawing and moving the pile often.


--------------------
Wilderness. It defines me.


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OfflineMFGFA37
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: gmuralid]
    #7549450 - 10/22/07 10:41 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)



--------------------
There is no try, only do. -Yoda-

Take no thought for tomorrow, tomorrow shall take thought for itself. Sufficient for one day are the thoughts/worries for that day. Any thought past this is useless. -Ole Jesus-


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Invisiblemycocurious
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: MFGFA37]
    #7549509 - 10/22/07 11:05 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

active composting (decomposition through thermophilic bacteria) and vermicomposting (decomposition through worms) are two different things and can't be mixed - although it's not uncommon to find a finished, aged compost pile become infested with worms when it's no longer heating up.


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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InvisibleGlacier Creek
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: resptodd]
    #7549559 - 10/22/07 11:19 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

resptodd said:
Rid the pine needles. the acidity will kill. Just take a look underneath a pine tree, see anything living?







:whack:


--------------------



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Invisiblejeetered
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Glacier Creek]
    #7550134 - 10/23/07 07:45 AM (16 years, 3 months ago)

lots of coniferous fungi out there, nice pic

cedar can be confused with pine, i guess...

u don't find much growing under cedars.


Edited by jeetered (10/23/07 07:46 AM)


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InvisibleSlimz
.-~*´`*·~-experience-~*´`*·~-.
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Folding@home Statistics
Registered: 10/03/07
Posts: 3,588
Loc: Maryland
Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: jeetered]
    #7550145 - 10/23/07 07:48 AM (16 years, 3 months ago)



--------------------
Lazy Drywall Tek (no powdery mess)

This series will blow your mind and confirm what you already know to be true.
The Pharmacratic Inquisition
Best Thread Ever ! ! !

:pm: me if you have questions about lasers

Although i may advise others in a general way regarding all types of mushroom grows, and may even post question from other forums about growing "active" mushrooms, i only grow non-"active" mushrooms and edibles.

FeelFamily resident tech guru


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Offlinemilkman
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Registered: 07/04/07
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Slimz]
    #7550693 - 10/23/07 12:35 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

walrus compost meaning killing a walrus and filling it with composting materials? ha this is my next test


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OfflineBlufNBrent
The Man

Registered: 04/24/07
Posts: 177
Last seen: 16 years, 2 months
Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7550795 - 10/23/07 01:02 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Hey, when that things done decomposing, dig a hole down the middle of it, and fill it with colonized wbs. When its all colonized, take the lid off, and flip it upside down, carefully pull the trashcan upwards. It will be the worlds biggest shroom cake:grin:

Ofcourse you would have to put it in a camping tent with a few coolmists to get it to fruit:thumbup:

Could you imagine a pic with you standing next to a cake that big with shrooms just covering it:eek:


--------------------
Just 4 Laughs, I would not in anyway break state, local or federal laws.


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Offlineresptodd
I reject yourreality andsubstitute myown
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: mycocurious]
    #7550861 - 10/23/07 01:19 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

My bad, I apologize for the misinfo. I am in a learning period myself and was simply relaying information I had picked up during this period. I use composted pine needles in my blueberry plot because of their acidity. I've not had a single mushroom of any sort grow through this compost, although mushrooms abound in my neutral compost heap.


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Damn! I'm having fun! Just keep the GD monkeys away.


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OfflineWalrus_Infested
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: milkman]
    #7553063 - 10/23/07 10:12 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

milkman said:
walrus compost meaning killing a walrus and filling it with composting materials? ha this is my next test




You sir are a gentlemen and a scholar. Count me in.


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OfflineVisionsToReality
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Registered: 09/22/07
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: Walrus_Infested]
    #7553075 - 10/23/07 10:15 PM (16 years, 3 months ago)

advice. just do the compost in a pile on the ground. fck containers, fuck bins!


--------------------
Life is one big road with lots of signs,
So when you're ridin' through the ruts,
Don't you complicate your mind.

Flee from hate, mischief and jealousy
Don't bury your thoughts,
Put your vision to reality, yeah!


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Invisiblemycocurious
Mike O. Kuerias
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Registered: 02/09/07
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Re: The Walrus Compost Tek [Re: VisionsToReality]
    #7553744 - 10/24/07 05:28 AM (16 years, 3 months ago)

Quote:

VisionsToReality said:
advice. just do the compost in a pile on the ground. fck containers, fuck bins!




+1 - provided you have the means to do so. There are quite a few urban composters out there that don't have the land or otherwise have restrictions that prohibit free-piles.

LOL, but if you're going to use a container, make it a fun one. Take a look at the product offered by www.rolypig.com if you want to see what has to be the most adorable composter on the planet, heh.


--------------------
:justdontknow: Don't mistake my tone for a "matter-of-fact" attitude.  I'm just presenting what I believe to be correct, until I'm corrected...

- How Myco-Curious Prepares Coir & Compost Substrates
- How Myco-Curious Builds A Bulk Humidifier
- How Myco-Curious Builds An Automated Greenhouse
------------------------------------
figgusfiddus said:
Keep in mind that inoculating or whatever in front of a flow hood won't help your bad substrate, your bad inoculant, your bad sterile procedure, etc. etc. etc. It's not a +3 flowhood of magic, it's just a tool.


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