Guest guest Posted March 9, 2005 Report Share Posted March 9, 2005 Rhonda: I can't help you with the kombucha idea but if you contact you local County Extension Service, they should be able to direct you as to how to get your soil tested. You may even be able to buy a kit to do it yourself. also try Google for soil testing! Good luck!!! vona Kombucha as an acidic fertilizer? > > > Hi all - I'm mostly a lurker, but now have a question. I live in the > Pacific Northwest. I have a rather small back yard. I got carried > away with a sale on two year old blueberry plants. Bought 12 and > already had 3 semi-mature ones in containers. Well, having 12 > wonderful blueberry plants means buying enough acidic planting mix to > plant these (read $$$) and I'm just wondering if I were to buy about > half of the acidic planting medium and then adjusted the existing > soil with something organic - namely KOMBUCHA if that would work? > Does anyone have experience with this? I also have a few azaleas and > hydrangeas. We also will be planting strawberries this spring and > the usual tomatoes. I don't have a soil tester so have no idea how > the ph is at this point. Any info would be appreciated. > > Rhonda > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2005 Report Share Posted March 9, 2005 I don't know about the Kombucha but your local agricultural extension will probably test your soil for a couple of dollars or so. At least you'll be able to see how many points you need to raise or lower your PH. ¸..· ´¨¨)) -:¦:- ¸.·´ .·´¨¨)) ((¸¸.·´ ..·´ -:¦:- 2005~*~Alive! Alive! Alive! -:¦:- ((¸¸.·´*. Kombucha as an acidic fertilizer? Hi all - I'm mostly a lurker, but now have a question. I live in the Pacific Northwest. I have a rather small back yard. I got carried away with a sale on two year old blueberry plants. Bought 12 and already had 3 semi-mature ones in containers. Well, having 12 wonderful blueberry plants means buying enough acidic planting mix to plant these (read $$$) and I'm just wondering if I were to buy about half of the acidic planting medium and then adjusted the existing soil with something organic - namely KOMBUCHA if that would work? Does anyone have experience with this? I also have a few azaleas and hydrangeas. We also will be planting strawberries this spring and the usual tomatoes. I don't have a soil tester so have no idea how the ph is at this point. Any info would be appreciated. Rhonda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2005 Report Share Posted March 9, 2005 >soil with something organic - namely KOMBUCHA if that would work? >Does anyone have experience with this? I also have a few azaleas and >hydrangeas. We also will be planting strawberries this spring and >the usual tomatoes. I don't have a soil tester so have no idea how >the ph is at this point. Any info would be appreciated. > >Rhonda Hi! I live in the Northwest too. We've struggled with sickly blueberry plants for a long time ... finally my dh actually READ our plant encyclopedia and followed their advice to the letter. WOW. They took off. They got happy. I don't have the mix at my fingertips, but it was basically not much and not expensive. He bought some chemical sulfate and added it at a fairly low dosage, and a couple of other chemicals. Usually we use fertilizer (I love Alaska fish fertilizer) but that didn't seem to help the blueberries. This strange mix of his did though. As for kombucha ... I don't know. Fermented stuff in general seems to be good for plants (esp. Alaska fish fertilizer!) but it's easy to overdo it and kill the plant. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2005 Report Share Posted March 9, 2005 > > >soil with something organic - namely KOMBUCHA if that would work? > >Does anyone have experience with this? I also have a few azaleas and > >hydrangeas. We also will be planting strawberries this spring and > >the usual tomatoes. I don't have a soil tester so have no idea how > >the ph is at this point. Any info would be appreciated. > > > >Rhonda > > Hi! I live in the Northwest too. We've struggled with sickly blueberry > plants for a long time ... finally my dh actually READ our plant encyclopedia > and followed their advice to the letter. WOW. They took off. They got happy. > > I don't have the mix at my fingertips, but it was basically not much and not > expensive. He bought some chemical sulfate and added it at a fairly low dosage, > and a couple of other chemicals. Usually we use fertilizer (I love Alaska fish > fertilizer) but that didn't seem to help the blueberries. This strange mix of his > did though. > > As for kombucha ... I don't know. Fermented stuff in general seems to be good > for plants (esp. Alaska fish fertilizer!) but it's easy to overdo it and kill the plant. > > > Heidi Jean Heidi, My 3 blueberries in the containers are doing great. I give them a healthy dose of Whitney Farms Organic Acidic Food once a year. My problem is that my budget won't allow me to buy a dozen containers AND the amount of acidic planting mix needed to plant a dozen. (what was I thinking when I bought them last June? - with my employee discount at and Perkins I only paid $2.09 each) So we were going to just plant them in the ground along a wooden fence. I know that just plunking them in the ground they'll grow since it seems that everything thrives here in southern Oregon. But I'm wanting plants that really produce the berries. Optimal nutrition should produce healthier plants with lots of berries. I probably should take several folks' advice and get the soil tested. But that's not how we've gardened up to this point. A little of this, a little of that -kinda' like my cooking. But unlike my cooking which can go into the garbage if it doesn't work out, I'd lose my blueberry plants. I've posted the question on the Kefir group, knowing that there are some kombucha experts on that list as well. And I'm not in a hurry to plant anyway. They are fine in the gallon containers for another month anyway. Thanks for the imput Rhonda who never paid that much attention to the Alaska fish fertilizer before - fermented? interesting Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2005 Report Share Posted March 9, 2005 > But I'm wanting >plants that really produce the berries. Optimal nutrition should >produce healthier plants with lots of berries. I probably should >take several folks' advice and get the soil tested. We got a little soil test kit to test the soil, but the directions for berries were generic. I'll look them up and get back to you. Anyway, the stuff was REALLY cheap (and way more than we needed, so if you want, come up here and I'll give you enough for your berries). The rest of the plants ... the chickens fertilized them plenty well. They grew great. Our soil is ALWAYS acidic, so I don't know why the berries wanted more " stuff " but, they did. However, I've grown blueberries with no nutrition at all and they do ok. So if you do nothing they won't die, just produce less. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 9, 2005 Report Share Posted March 9, 2005 Hi Rhonda, have you tried the kombucha tea list? I remember reading there that people put cut up scobys in the garden. Don't remember what they were growing. I've done the same with my scobys, just to give them back to the earth. I am not really a gardener. Would not mind having some blueberries growing in the back yard. Regards, Virginia D. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 10, 2005 Report Share Posted March 10, 2005 > We got a little soil test kit to test the soil, but the directions > for berries were generic. I'll look them up and get back to you. > Anyway, the stuff was REALLY cheap (and way more than we needed, > so if you want, come up here and I'll give you enough for your berries). Oh Heidi, I wish that I could come up to Washington for a visit. I'd love to be fed one of your wonderful gluten free meals. We've just this week started incorporating wheat back into the diet. We went 6 weeks totally gluten free. DH says his RA seems to be somewhat better. But both of us are missing the wheaty bread. I've been sprouting, dehydrating and grinding the wheat, then soaking in kefir (back on microbial topic LOL) for about 10 hours before making the bread. So far the bread has bombed out. I used to make a light sandwich bread, full of awful things like non instant nonfat dried milk powder and even soy - can you believe it? But now that I'm trying to make a nourishing bread it flops. Anyway, DH hasn't seen any reaction to the wheat this week. I'll mostly use the wheat for bread. I find that the gluten free grains work fine for other baking. We'll see how the wheat affect him in the next couple of weeks. If his RA symptoms worsen again, we'll go back to gluten free. I suspect that you are correct about the blueberries doing ok without adjusting the soil ph much. I know the 3 semi-mature ones in the containers put out the fruit-just not adundantly. I have sure gotten in a blueberry kefir smoothie habit lately. I'm sure that I won't be able to grow enough blueberries for my insatiable habit Rhonda Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 11, 2005 Report Share Posted March 11, 2005 Rhonda: >Oh Heidi, I wish that I could come up to Washington for a visit. I'd >love to be fed one of your wonderful gluten free meals. We've just >this week started incorporating wheat back into the diet. ... > I'll mostly use the wheat for >bread. I find that the gluten free grains work fine for other >baking. We'll see how the wheat affect him in the next couple of >weeks. If his RA symptoms worsen again, we'll go back to gluten free. Or you might want to get some testing done. The gluten symptoms aren't obvious to most folks, nor do they go away quickly for a lot of folks. The only way to really tell if there is an IgA problem is with testing ... and for many folks, it's just too big a sacrifice to give up bread. Actually one of my relatives (who has some fairly classic celiac symptoms) told me " I'd rather die than give up my bread! " . My own family got it kind of " snuck " onto them, because I just started cooking different for my own selfish reasons (I didn't want to handle wheat flour). But they get fairly obvious symptoms when they eat wheat now, and don't desire it. It's a more difficult issue for " long term " symptoms that other folks get (like anemia, depression, RA, skin problems). The book Dangerous Grains lays out the risks/benefits nicely though. >I suspect that you are correct about the blueberries doing ok without >adjusting the soil ph much. I know the 3 semi-mature ones in the >containers put out the fruit-just not adundantly. I have sure gotten >in a blueberry kefir smoothie habit lately. I'm sure that I won't be >able to grow enough blueberries for my insatiable habit I don't know that we DIDN'T adjust it much. It's just that we went the chemical route, with ammonium sulfate, I think it was. Cheap! But the blueberries love it. I think they might like having all that sulfur too. I'm a blueberry nut too. When we were in Germany, a relative pointed out blueberries at a store, and said, " Heidlebeern! " . I thought she was making fun of me, calling them " Heidi Berries " but in fact that is their name ( " Heid " comes from " " , which I guess looks like blueberry bushes?). > Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 11, 2005 Report Share Posted March 11, 2005 Heidi: actually blueberries are in the same family as heathers! vona Re: Kombucha as an acidic fertilizer? > > > Rhonda: > >>Oh Heidi, I wish that I could come up to Washington for a visit. I'd >>love to be fed one of your wonderful gluten free meals. We've just >>this week started incorporating wheat back into the diet. ... >> I'll mostly use the wheat for >>bread. I find that the gluten free grains work fine for other >>baking. We'll see how the wheat affect him in the next couple of >>weeks. If his RA symptoms worsen again, we'll go back to gluten free. > > Or you might want to get some testing done. The gluten symptoms > aren't obvious to most folks, nor do they go away quickly for > a lot of folks. The only way to really tell if there is an IgA problem > is with testing ... and for many folks, it's just too big a sacrifice > to give up bread. Actually one of my relatives (who has some > fairly classic celiac symptoms) told me " I'd rather die than give > up my bread! " . > > My own family got it kind of " snuck " onto them, because I just > started cooking different for my own selfish reasons (I didn't > want to handle wheat flour). But they get fairly obvious symptoms > when they eat wheat now, and don't desire it. It's a more difficult > issue for " long term " symptoms that other folks get (like anemia, > depression, RA, skin problems). The book Dangerous Grains lays > out the risks/benefits nicely though. > > >>I suspect that you are correct about the blueberries doing ok without >>adjusting the soil ph much. I know the 3 semi-mature ones in the >>containers put out the fruit-just not adundantly. I have sure gotten >>in a blueberry kefir smoothie habit lately. I'm sure that I won't be >>able to grow enough blueberries for my insatiable habit > > I don't know that we DIDN'T adjust it much. It's just that we went > the chemical route, with ammonium sulfate, I think it was. Cheap! > But the blueberries love it. I think they might like having all that > sulfur too. > > I'm a blueberry nut too. When we were in Germany, a relative > pointed out blueberries at a store, and said, " Heidlebeern! " . I > thought she was making fun of me, calling them " Heidi Berries " > but in fact that is their name ( " Heid " comes from " " , > which I guess looks like blueberry bushes?). > >> > > Heidi Jean > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 11, 2005 Report Share Posted March 11, 2005 >Heidi: actually blueberries are in the same family as heathers! > >vona Thanks! I suspected something like that, because they grow in the same areas (the wild ones, anyway) but didn't know for sure. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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