Breakthrough: “Electronic soil” boosts crop growth by over 50%::This research introduces an innovative approach to soilless cultivation, or hydroponics, by integrating electronic soil, or eSoil.

  • @reagansrottencorpse
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    1111 months ago

    I grow using a technique known as “notill” where you guessed it, I never till the soil. Or replace it. It’s organic, I even have helper bugs and worms. Inside. It’s awesome.

    • @diannetea
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      511 months ago

      It’s really weird to me that you write just like Jesse talks on the No Till Growers youtube channel

      • @reagansrottencorpse
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        111 months ago

        That’s interesting, I’ll check the channel out, thanks!

        I’m not Jesse though I promise.

    • @douglasg14b
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      11 months ago

      Don’t you have to till at least once?

      I tried growing on ground that was matted deep with decades old dead vegetation. And even after raking the crap out of it and trying to dethatch it, I couldn’t get anything to stick.

      After giving it a good till and mixing in a decent bit of old herbivore manure, my plants took and grew wonderfully.

      • @Pipoca
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        411 months ago

        Nope. The idea in no till is just adding stuff to the top and letting worms and roots handle the tilling.

        I’ve had good luck just dumping a foot or two of finished compost on the ground and growing in it.

        Another solid no-till approach is sheet mulching. You put down a layer of cardboard (to kill weeds), then layers of carbon and nitrogen like straw and kitchen scraps. Wait a few months, then plant. So you could do that in the late summer or fall to prepare a site for spring planting.

        A lot of these things depend on location, though. Something that works great in Pennsylvania might not work as well in Utah.