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Humichar as well as high potassium fert safe?
Posted on 5/7/24 at 12:48 pm
Posted on 5/7/24 at 12:48 pm
I have never applied humichar but I am thinking of adding to my soil soon, but based on soil tests will need to add high potassium fertilizer as well. Are these safe to apply this time of year, particularly late May?
Is humichar DG snake oil? Thoughts?
Is humichar DG snake oil? Thoughts?
Posted on 5/7/24 at 2:49 pm to chieftiger
Can't comment on the snake oil part, but you should be safe to put HumiChar down at any time and as often as you want. From what I understand, it takes a longgggg time to provide changes in your soil - like years.
Posted on 5/7/24 at 3:52 pm to Ziggy
I was thinking of adding once a year, every year.....can't hurt I assume
Posted on 5/7/24 at 3:58 pm to chieftiger
quote:
I was thinking of adding once a year, every year.....can't hurt I assume
I think you should probably put it down more often than that if you want to see any appreciable changes. I'll let others chime in on the snake oil part, but everything I've read said that it's good stuff -- just takes awhile to amend the soil.
Posted on 5/7/24 at 9:15 pm to chieftiger
Humichar is not snake oil as long as you aren’t doing it for liquid aeration reasons. That and carbon pro g are good products
Posted on 5/8/24 at 6:45 am to ronk
I am.just trying to increase nutrients, health, microbial function of my soil. I debated topdressing with some compost but think I'm going the route of humichar this year.
Posted on 5/8/24 at 7:33 am to chieftiger
ronk - thoughts on Dirt Booster to the lawn every couple months?
Posted on 5/8/24 at 7:53 am to Bayou
It is similar to humichar. It will improve overall heatlh of the soil.
Posted on 5/8/24 at 10:19 pm to chieftiger
I used humichar all winter and threw down a 0-0-45 potash and I had the first fully green centipede lawn in the neighborhood by a few weeks.
Posted on 5/9/24 at 6:05 am to chieftiger
I've wanted to try it but $90 for a 40 pound bag is a little salty after already buying fert, grub preventative, pre-emerg, post-emeeg, disease/fungus, etc.
Posted on 5/9/24 at 6:17 am to TigerFanatic99
quote:
I've wanted to try it but $90 for a 40 pound bag is a little salty after already buying fert, grub preventative, pre-emerg, post-emeeg, disease/fungus, etc.
Agreed.
All Anderson's products are high dollar.
Posted on 5/9/24 at 6:29 am to StraightCashHomey21
I debated doing it this way too. Leading up to spring green up. Basically, soil amendment through winter into spring, but fert in late spring into summer.
Posted on 5/9/24 at 8:42 am to TigerFanatic99
quote:
I've wanted to try it but $90 for a 40 pound bag is a little salty after already buying fert, grub preventative, pre-emerg, post-emeeg, disease/fungus, etc.
I'm seeing this at Site One:
LESCO CarbonPro-G Soil Optimizer (QGCY) 40 lb.
Maximizes turf recovery and mitigates effects from environmental and cultural stressors
Enhances turf greening
Increases nutrient uptake and utilization efficiency (improves return on current nutrient investment.
Optimizes pH, salinity, and CEC
YOUR PRICE
$32.63 / Each
This post was edited on 5/9/24 at 9:23 am
Posted on 5/9/24 at 10:26 am to bayoubengals88
Compare the labels on both to see what is actually inside each bag?
That may or may not explain some of the difference in cost.
That may or may not explain some of the difference in cost.
Posted on 5/9/24 at 7:23 pm to ronk
quote:
It is similar to humichar. It will improve overall heatlh of the soil.
I've used Dirt Booster every couple months for the past 8-10 months. Mushrooms are everywhere right now so it must be a good sign.
Thanks
Posted on 5/15/24 at 11:16 am to chieftiger
You might be interested in this kind of thing.
Root development after a summer of testing products.
This guy is in NC.
Humic test plot update:
https://www.thelawnforum.com/threads/adgattonis-lawn-journal.8947/page-3?nested_view=1&sortby=oldest
Root development after a summer of testing products.
This guy is in NC.
Humic test plot update:
quote:
Disclaimers: In fairness to Matt, I suspended the Carbon-X test for part of the season to work on a phosphorus deficiency. Also, the GCF products had a one month head start on K4L's Extreme Blend.
Root pictures below. Most of these had more root mass than pictured, but the soil was pretty sticky so some root mass came off in the wash unfortunately. I would say each of these had some roots in the 4"+ depth despite the terrible soil. The Air-8 sample was easier to clean than the others due to noticeably better soil tilth (not crumbly infield clay, but better than the others), which IMO lead to more intact root mass for the picture. If that continues through next year, I will conclude Air-8 is worth my money for the soil tilth improvements. Anecdotally I'm happy with the Air-8 results, though I still don't know how the science holds up.
The cores were all pretty easy to pull, but we've had a good bit of rain lately too. There's still no difference in visual appearance across the test plots (this has been true throughout the season - not due to the recent rainfall). The next tests will be fall/winter color and spring green-up. Will provide a picture closer to dormancy.
https://www.thelawnforum.com/threads/adgattonis-lawn-journal.8947/page-3?nested_view=1&sortby=oldest
This post was edited on 5/15/24 at 11:18 am
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