Replies (5)

From where I'm standing, you couldn't do it any better. Organic soil, rabbit garden, natural light, full coverage of trichomes... it is artful cultivation. Did you do any compost teas this year?
Thanks for the props! It's a very hands off approach. I didn't do any teas. I only watered a handful of times to get them established after transplanting. I need to make some time to play around with foliar feeding not only for the cannabis but for all the fruit trees in the food forest too. I've got plenty of comfry and other goodies to play around with fermented plant juice, in addition to all sorts of compost. I'm still in the building stage of most of the systems here on the homestead, foliar feeds feel like the next step when everything is planted and established to maximize yeilds. I'll get there eventually.
Ive had really good luck with worm casting teas. Add a little bat guano and molasses, mix, then aerate it for 24 hrs. Apply it like you would water and you don't even need to pH it. I became an organic gardener out of laziness lol.
Exactly, working with nature makes things more simple in many ways. Integrated approaches allow for less than maximum yeilds because more than one yield is obtained simultaneously from each system.
I'm loving your integration of mining for heat... the same system applies everywhere.