Thread: Dung!
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Old 07-03-2005, 03:17 PM
travena travena is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2005
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The organismen, which are used for this kind of job are specialy selected and in powder form.
After they get into water they will come back to life and very hungry, at current this is the highest concentration you can get on the market frøm the enzyme and or Bacteria producers.
Microorganismen widly used in washing liquids oil cleaning and so on.

The success and time is a number game, more organismen less time.

I think you can find some more info now on this side www.travena.com

Josef

Quote:
Originally Posted by
Franz Heymann wrote:
Why is there an upper limit to the amount of dung your

micro-organisms
will tackle?

It's the old logistic equation. As they work, they too will
excrete/change the local chemical balance until they are
starved/poisioned out of activity.

Of course, if you take 'seed' amounts during the early part of the
process you can infect new piles of manure and get better value for
money. Like taking cuttings. Keep feeding and mixing, that's the trick.

There may be other effects, like a carefully engineered life cycle,
designed to keep the cash flowing to the vendor!


And since they will probably multiply like rabbits while doing their
job, why does one need 10 gms as a starter?

I don't know, but my best guess is that they are supplied packed out to
10g with some sort of filler (like water?) to keep them alive and to
make it easier to handle and subdivide if required. I'd be amazed if
it was 10g of pure bugs.