



James
Good point Greth, did not think of the lime aspect.Greth wrote:My worry would be that the limey shells would make for very alkaline conditions, but what do others think?
Hey Jamie, actually there are up to three grades of shell grit, believe it or not, fine ,medium, and coarse, but i would be mixing it with Attapulgite, and probably cow manure or decomposed bark compost, as a mix.Jamie wrote:i wouldnt be as concerned about the soil condition being alkaline more so than the fine grit compacting on itself and causing issues with watering
interesting mate, what is the largest size "grit" you can get? the shell grit i have seen was always qute fine, very fine actually and if there was to much in the mix might cause probs.senseijames wrote:Hey Jamie, actually there are up to three grades of shell grit, believe it or not, fine ,medium, and coarse, but i would be mixing it with Attapulgite, and probably cow manure or decomposed bark compost, as a mix.Jamie wrote:i wouldnt be as concerned about the soil condition being alkaline more so than the fine grit compacting on itself and causing issues with watering
James
Around 6mm Jamie, I was thinking that the shell grit would actually aid in drainage and the Attapulgite would hold the water, would probably use 1 part shell grit / 2 parts attapulgite / 1 part old cow poo or deco bark.Jamie wrote:interesting mate, what is the largest size "grit" you can get? the shell grit i have seen was always qute fine, very fine actually and if there was to much in the mix might cause probs.senseijames wrote:Hey Jamie, actually there are up to three grades of shell grit, believe it or not, fine ,medium, and coarse, but i would be mixing it with Attapulgite, and probably cow manure or decomposed bark compost, as a mix.Jamie wrote:i wouldnt be as concerned about the soil condition being alkaline more so than the fine grit compacting on itself and causing issues with watering
James
remember with a finer particle size in the mix it will raise the water table and could be constantly soaked by water retension, i would start with a small amount if you were are to go ahead with it, i dont see what the prob with just the attipulgite(even though i would use diatomite if you can get it) and cow manure/decomposted bark as a mix, the attapulgite with give you the "grit" aspect of a mix.
jamie
senseijames wrote:Hey,just started to test using Chicken " shell grit " instead of gravel
, to see how it goes, I have been washing it first in case there is any sea salt left
, not sure if it is washed in the factory, the only worry that i have is when you repot with it is the shell grit going to sever the finer roots
, what do ya think ????
James
Hi Greth, I am doing the same thing up here where I live, there are meat ant nests, and they bring up all the deco granite, to the surface neatly sized,Greth wrote:Dont bother buying the stuff tho, all ya need is a good gritty beach, you will probably find nature has sorted the sizes too!
My ' interesting grit source' is the ant mounds around here, they seem to bring up piles of neatly sorted gravel, 4-6 mm. The only problem is collecting it without stirring up the entire ant mound. Have to do a quick sweeping raid then wait till the ants settle before going back and collecting it!
john m wrote:I tryed shell grit afew years ago does not make any difference at all (old wives talls)