I've been spinning my wheels for a few days regarding properly building and maintaining the appropriate soil biota for healthy growth. I've used chemical fertilizers in the past as well as organic fertilizers, compost, and fish/seaweed emulsions. My peppers grew very well until a few years ago. They still grew, but not quite as well as before. I got my soil tested and it came back that I was high in some nutrients (calcium, phosphorous, and magnesium) and that my pH was a little high (about 7.2). Assuming the high pH was decreasing nutrient availability, I added a little pelletized sulfur last month according to directions to resore pH, but even afterwards I started wondering if something else is missing. I'm wondering now if I were to boost soil biota (both beneficial bacteria and fungi, as well as adding humic acid) if I would increase nutrient availability to the peppers.
A few of the approaches that I've considered:
Grabbing some of the humus layer from a local forest floor and adding it to the garden. My one hesitation is that NJ is deer tick central and I really don't want any of that noise in my yard.
Using the aforementioned humus to make a compost tea/aerated compost tea
Using AACT with a blend of some compost/humus, myco inoculant, fish and seaweed
Adding humic acid and some of the leaf compost that I have, and just waiting and giving the humus layer some time to restore itself in my garden (note that I turned the soil a few times over the years, which probably didn't help the humus layer much).
My hesitation with any of the above approaches is that I really don't have a baseline of what the soil biota already is in my garden. Testing it would be expensive, and I've already invested quite a bit into my garden this year.
Can anyone please offer some guidance on how I might approach an inexpensive and foolproof way to boost soil biota for this year? I'm not necessarily looking for perfect soil this very year, I figure 7.2 isn't terrible for pH and eventually it'll restore itself, but I'd like to take some steps towards improving the health of my soil and within the next few years really get it on point. Any guidance is really appreciated! @Pepper-Guru I know you've talked about this in the past and would love to hear your input as well.
Many thanks!
A few of the approaches that I've considered:
Grabbing some of the humus layer from a local forest floor and adding it to the garden. My one hesitation is that NJ is deer tick central and I really don't want any of that noise in my yard.
Using the aforementioned humus to make a compost tea/aerated compost tea
Using AACT with a blend of some compost/humus, myco inoculant, fish and seaweed
Adding humic acid and some of the leaf compost that I have, and just waiting and giving the humus layer some time to restore itself in my garden (note that I turned the soil a few times over the years, which probably didn't help the humus layer much).
My hesitation with any of the above approaches is that I really don't have a baseline of what the soil biota already is in my garden. Testing it would be expensive, and I've already invested quite a bit into my garden this year.
Can anyone please offer some guidance on how I might approach an inexpensive and foolproof way to boost soil biota for this year? I'm not necessarily looking for perfect soil this very year, I figure 7.2 isn't terrible for pH and eventually it'll restore itself, but I'd like to take some steps towards improving the health of my soil and within the next few years really get it on point. Any guidance is really appreciated! @Pepper-Guru I know you've talked about this in the past and would love to hear your input as well.
Many thanks!