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Tsikoteer
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April 16th, 2014 05:44 PM #11Pwedeng pwede sir CB, yan din pinapakain sa tilapia. Usually poultry farms do sell these chick manure already dried up to remove pathogens. Pero recommend ko kung may space ka for for compost, ito pinaka the best. Tapon mo lang doon lahat ng biodegradable waste collected from the house then put cover (but with enough ventilation). Wait for couple of months, the decomposed part settles at the buttom that u could collect. It may need periodic watering and aeration din to speedup decomposition. It becomes hot when bacteria kicks in with decomposition.
I have one in the house while in the farm its a vermicompost - african worms digest the shredded leaves etc then the droppings becomes fertilizer. This is the best i've tried so far, very fine and even ang outcome no more need to treat under the sun.
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April 16th, 2014 05:53 PM #12
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Tsikoteer
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April 16th, 2014 06:13 PM #13Yung african worms medyo controlled environment, may bedding at shade,no water pooling. Iwas din sa mga alagang manok na may mga sisiw para hindi maubos.
Kung sa bahay ok na ang regular compost, at least dalawang compost box para madali ang extraction. Yung regular worms and magotts din ang nakakapagpabilis ng decomposition, pero not desirable ang flies since baka magkalat ng sakit kaya dapat may cover or net.
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April 16th, 2014 07:10 PM #14
Organic farming does not work too well in commercial farming. Chicken manure from poultry farms are becoming too acidic. See what chemicals and medicines they are feeding chickens these days.
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Tsikoteer
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April 17th, 2014 02:43 PM #15Say that the soil does become acidic/akaline/mineralized, is it basically game over for the farm?
Is it also advisable to use fishpond water? Although i can see the same problems as with chicken poop kung feeds and pinapakain dun.
Been doing some experiments at home: composting, reusing fish tank water for plants. Dunno, there's just something in the efficiency that i like.
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Tsikoteer
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April 17th, 2014 02:46 PM #16
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April 17th, 2014 03:06 PM #17
Difficult to implement organic in commercial scale and market is not ready to pay more for organic produce. Laziness and hardheadedness of growers / farmers. Plus corruption, not government but business. Consultants and managers earn more commissions from using commercial fertilizers.
Farmers want what is convenient also so they tend to use commercial fertilizers. Do you know how much pesticides and insecticides they apply now in rice farms? They put a lot that not even birds dare fly in such an area.
There are some good fertilizers in the market but it's hard to teach old farmers new tricks and very few new generation of farmers are produced. The smarter children of farmers tend to migrate to the city for greener pastures. Very few study agriculture and go back to their homelands. Why would a farmer want their children to study being a farmer?
People in provinces think rice farming does not yield much income. A hectare of rice using a better system and technology can produce 6-8 tons per harvest or 12 tons annually compared to the national average of 3-4 tons annually.
There is no PURE organic produce that is being made in a commercial scale. Passing international requirements for organic certification does not mean they don't use any chemicals at all. They still use chemicals but ones that are certified, they're still chemicals.Last edited by Walter; April 17th, 2014 at 03:13 PM.
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April 17th, 2014 03:09 PM #18
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April 22nd, 2014 11:30 AM #19
sa aking munting sapantaha, sa ganang akin e hindi naman ito nakaka apekto. kase tubig padin yan at kahet san pa galing ang tubig na yaan e tatanggapin ng lupa yaan para sa halaman, maliban nalamnag kung may halong kemikal yaan na nakakalason sa halaman. sa mga pananim namin dati galing tubig imburnal ang gamit namin pero naaabsorb naman ng lupa para sa mga tanim, kapag nasala mo ang dumi nere at pung tubig nalamang at wala na halong ibang bagay nakaka tulong padin ito, hanggang sa mag karon ng tubig poso. wag lang tubig dagat ang gagamitin mo sigurado patay halaman mo kapag ganun.
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April 2nd, 2016 03:03 AM #20
I'm interested on organic farming in a commercial scale. Say 50 hectare, is it viable bro Walter?
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