And the battery dies every 15 mins on the cheap ones. Tools, lawyers, condoms and socks you don’t skimp on always get the best
I wish someone had told me a long time ago that drills are meant for drilling, not for driving screws. Impact drivers are for screws.
I like my ridgid cordless tools, especially since I bought bigger batteries for the saws.
That good good rabbit poop. Making a tea with some of this today. I already have so much of this shit lol
I didn’t know where else to post this, figured it made growing cheaper (for soil guys) so this was a decent place haha
Bruh, you need to become the Forum’s foremost Shit Slanger by selling 5 pound bags of rabbit turds! Get the kids to bag it up, and you only need to ship it.
It includes everything! Shit, Child Labor, USPS (also shit), and (you guessed it) Moar Shit!
Not a bad idea!
If I scale up I’m rabbits I might try it.
Right now I think I’m going to be able to use all of it between my veggie garden, outdoor soil and teas (for both indoor and outdoor).
I also have a fuck ton of chicken shit compost going.
Our rabbits love defoliation time and harvest time. They’ll turn a pile of fresh leaves or branches and stems into poop really fast. I’d rather have rabbit poop on the compost pile than weed leaves for security purposes. So I guess my rabbits are security rabbits!
We compost alot of shit. rabbit, chicken, turkey, duck, sheep, goats, horses, and cows. The pig shit is nasty so I don’t bother with it. When I harvest I throw what soil and root ball in to compost as well.
When I plant I fill strait compost in bottom 25% of planter. Then blend the rest.
Chicken compost for veg. What is the NPK and calcium content of rabbit poop? Is it suitable for flower?
Along with AGT-50, we might have a complete Future 4200 organic fertilizer lineup!
2-1-1 is what I found in a quick search. Will look into calcium content
And this
“ Here are a few facts about rabbit manure:
- Rabbit manure has four times more nutrients than cow or horse manure and is twice as rich as chicken manure. Cow, horse and chicken manure are considered “hot” and need to be composted (well-rotted) to use as fertilizers.
- One of the best things about rabbit manure is it doesn’t need to be composted.
- Rabbit manure is organic matter and improves poor soil structure, drainage and moisture retention.
- It improves the life cycle of microorganisms in the soil.
- Worms love rabbit manure.
- It is not as smelly as other manures and is easy to handle.
- One doe and her offspring can produce a ton of manure in one year. That’s a lot of bunny honey.
- Rabbit manure is packed with nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, minerals and micronutrients.
- It contains beneficial trace elements such as calcium, magnesium, boron, zinc, manganese, sulfur, copper and cobalt, just to name a few.
- Nitrogen (N). Rabbit manure is higher in nitrogen than sheep, goat, chicken, cow or horse manure. Plants need nitrogen to produce strong green growth.
- Phosphorus (P). Rabbit manure is also higher in phosphorus than the other manures. It helps with the transformation of solar energy to chemical energy. Phosphorus also helps plants to withstand stress and contributes to more and bigger blossoms, and is great for root growth.
- Potassium (K). Potassium helps with fruit quality and reducing disease; plants will not grow without it.”
Just a quick update of where I’m at. Decided to go the raised bed route (always wanted to, so said fuck it). One 4’x8’x18” and one 4’x4’x18”
Will be doing 16 plants per light (4x4)
What I will be filling them with and using for feed. Ended up not going with salts. But yeah still budget for an “organic” grow ime
Got everything ordered (that I couldn’t get locally) and will be filling beds with soil in the next week hopefully.
Still plan on using flora flex’s micro dripper lineup for irrigation.
Duck shit isn’t hot, is pretty even across npk, is more watery (spreads easily naturally) than chicken shit, so we let them run around the garden eating bugs. worms have been jump roping in my compost pile (which is basically a 6×6 pile in the ground just down hill from the duck pool, so when we change the water it just drains into the compost ) ducks also make more shit pound for pound.
I need to get this tea shit down though, any tips for a good one more than welcome