www.binnsoilnutrients.com There is a vital key to healthy abundant food in the simple act of adding rock dust from a volcanic rock to the soil we grow our food in. The actual process is complex, increasing bacteria in the soil, and availability of certain minerals which do become depleted over time. Pioneering research is going on in the UK. As we are all mineral deficient and many diseases are routinely cured by nutrition alone remineralising the soil should be top of the agenda of an uncontrolled media. Here is a piece about some true heros of our times. Gardeners explore the above website if you are near Brighton, Rock Dust will soon be available from Anahata Health Clinic, call 01273 698697
I would do a brix test on a grow with, and without, and let the results will reveal if it's any benefit or not. I can see in theory that this sounds a good idea, but in reality im more sceptical about it until the results.
AnitaGofradump2008 5 months ago
It was concluded that rockdust was not shown to influence plant yield or quality in
the agricultural setting of the field trial, nor was it shown to be a useful addition to
plant growth media. Therefore rockdust could not be proven to be a useful soil
fertility amendment. Glasgow University: theses.gla.ac.uk/617/01/2009campbelllphd.pdf
CliveJM 1 year ago
@2004carlt
From where did you buy it (which website )
?
theracemixer 1 year ago
@theracemixer With the small amount I mixed in I'd say the plants grew well but you'd have to have more than one bag to really tell, unless it was for a small patch. Plus, I imagine the minarals would leach into the soil over time. Worth a go if your local garden centre stocks it as the postage doubles the cost.
2004carlt 1 year ago
@2004carlt
has it worked for you???
theracemixer 1 year ago
I'm buying some now.
2004carlt 2 years ago