Noah Yates said:Uncomposted/decayed mulch isn't very good to use as a soil amendment, because it has the effect of leaching the nutrients from the soil as microbiota work to break it down... in effect causing your soil to become deficient. However, if the mulch is well-composted then it will already be saturated with microbiota and the necessary ingredients to continue breaking down.. and can be a good filler amendment at that stage.
ShowMeDaSauce said:Around here finding the fines is a huge pain. The only place i can get them is at one of the large composting places. Problem is i would need to buy a cubic yard of them for $42. I don't need a freaking cubic yard of pine bark fines though,
So see if you have any composting places near you. They normally only offer things like mulch, compost and soils.
Interesting. I'd never heard that. Then again, I haven't looked it up in years eitherPowelly said:I believe that this was disproven regarding it leaching nitrogen from the soil
MikeUSMC said:Interesting. I'd never heard that. Then again, I haven't looked it up in years either
I thought that was the whole point behind using pine BARK fines and screening out the sapwood
Powelly said:"The wood from heartwood and branches larger than 3 inches in diameter is not desirable due to its high C/N (carbon to nitrogen) ratio (averaging 600:1), which then requires additional nitrogen for decomposition"
Does anyone know what form the nitrogen is in? For example ammonium vs nitrates
Unfortunately it's not cited
Powelly said:
For some reason, in Return to Eden method it is opposite. Not sure why
Fungi break down hardwood and I don't believe nitrogen is required to break this down. Plants in acidic soils generally favor ammonium and the bacteria who are often blamed for removing the nitrogen from the soil to break down wood chips utilize nitrates / nitrites which are commonly found in alkaline soils (the bacteria don't reproduce in soils with a pH below 7)
I suppose you have to entertain the idea of the hardwood absorbing some of the ammonium in the soil but there should be plenty of soil ammonium to go around and I doubt that the wood would absorb a significant enough amount