superdave336
Well-known member
So my buddy says they are essentially the same and natural charcoal should work the same. Online says differently. My question is has anyone used natural charcoal instead of bio-char and if so, what were the results?
I havent but wood ash is a soil amendment on its own that isnt bad. I mean washed wood ash is what potash is. I would say biochar is unique in its purpose to hold nutrients you add to the soil. its something ive been looking at since sandy soils are really hard to hold nitrogen in.So my buddy says they are essentially the same and natural charcoal should work the same. Online says differently. My question is has anyone used natural charcoal instead of bio-char and if so, what were the results?
Charged means it has been soaked to absorb nutrients etc.It seems to work well for plants with more root mass @ tomatoes beets radishes ... ive only seen a few comparisons and experiments on YouTube
I havent tried it but the quick google says that proper biochar is made with high heat and no oxygen... and so no ashes ... and all that is bad for soil is expelled as a gas... but it seems like even poorly made biochar would turn good over time...
I saw a video discussing that says that what we do know for sure, that it improves nutrient or ion exchange.. im not sure what charged vs not charged means exactly, allowing it to absorb microbes from compost?
According to this video, uncharged works like a sponge absorbing nutrients at first
Still learning