Colorado
Masterpiece
Fair enough!
Agreed, i have noticed some very positive results combining organic components. one of the most obvious is the proliferation of mycorrhizae . I believe sometimes it is associated with a change or variation in substrate that creates a better environment as well. My favorite organic combination contains.There's a lot more information out there to support what Ian was talking about, if you feel like reading.
This is all true and well known here by now. What I discovered is the scary fact that there's little to zero nutrition in the vegetables that's mass produced on sterile soil world wide (its not soil anymore really...its just dirt).Given the fact that inorganic molecules and organic molecules are identical. Given the fact that all inorganic chemicals come from natural sources. And it is difficult to find any evidence that plants can tell the difference where the elements come from that they need.
Lets be clear, they were talking about composting in order to make compost tea, to use as a supplement for promoting a healthy micro-biome in the soil. Not as a soil component. You can talk to Anthony about that though, I'm sure he will give you the run down on marbles as well.
The podcast episode was fantastic. Some of it was the two of them throwing around speculative ideas about how Ian's knowledge of soil science (NOT bonsai soil science lets be clear) could be applied to bonsai. But they are very clear about what was speculation and what was real tested science. I think a lot of what Ian observes in soil science in the fields of agriculture or horticulture has the potential to be applied to bonsai. The big takeaway for me was that when you're using organic fertilizers with more complex molecules that must break down... in essence you are really feeding the soil and the microbe community first which then makes the nutrients available to the plant. And how this approach can often create stronger, more disease resistance plants, as opposed to a purely miracle-grow fed plant. That was a light bulb moment for me, and really help me put into context why you would want to use organic ferts instead and how exactly they work.
That is something Clever I would say.One thought on this. At the start of the podcast and also in the following live stream, Ryan indicated that he considered much of the discussion with Ian to
be "theoretical". I know I won't be going out and dousing all my trees with fish hydrolosates (or whatever it was) or home-made manure tea or bottled humic acid. I would
possibly test on small samples of experimental trees first (or wait for others to risk their collections).
Oops! Miss-use of analogy, 15 yards and loss of down...his is a gross oversimplification. Ice molecules and liquid water molecules are also identical. Yet I have a hard time believing one could propagate a plant in a block of solid ice the same way one could propagate a cutting in water. This is just one example.
Oops! Miss-use of analogy, 15 yards and loss of down...
You have to be certified or at least certifiable?Clearly there is an imminent need for bonsai to be 'Certified Organic'.
A new criterion for entry into an exhibition?
Remember, GIGO.
That was a very interesting aspect of the discussion. The counter argument is, what about the folks who've been using lousy soils (think turface-based) with liquid inorganic ferts for years and decades and haveOh I should add that another lightbulb moment for me from that podcast, relating to inorganic vs organic fertilizers, is that Ian talked about how inorganic fertilizers with just raw plant available n/p/k tend to feed the bacterial community and not the fungal community. He states that what is important for healthy soil is the ratio of bacterial biomass to fungal biomass. Yes you want bacteria in a healthy soil as well but as a much smaller part of that ratio. When feeding with miracle grow for example, the bacteria can readily use that nitrogen and so you end up with a bacteria dominated biome and little to no beneficial fungal activity. This can contribute to sick plants. Found this little nugget of information very illuminating.
That was a very interesting aspect of the discussion. The counter argument is, what about the folks who've been using lousy soils (think turface-based) with liquid inorganic ferts for years and decades and have
healthy vigorous trees.
When I first started bonsai I was using turface-based soils and inorganic ferts exclusively. I still found massive fungal/myco colonies in root systems when repotting. I've since moved to Boon-type mix and use both inorganics and organics and don't see much difference in the root systems when I repot. Overall my trees seem healthier but how do you partition the reasons for that...how much might be due to soil, how much to fertilizer, how much to the fact that I know how to water better and have a better grasp on timing of pruning, repotting, etc.