[Terrapreta] sugar usage

Michael Bailes michaelangelica at gmail.com
Mon Apr 23 21:47:27 CDT 2007


I would have thought sugar to be an expensive soil additive given its
potential to make bio-fuels?
Yes?
 No?

My very first house/garden was on a large suburban block of grass that had
been mowed for 20 years and the clippings taken to the tip. There was no
organic matter in the soil. My first attempts at growing things were not
good. Roses in particular fared badly.
 I finally pulled up a rose and found it's roots coved in nodules which I
found out to be root-knot nematodes.

 I asked the Department of Agriculture what to do about this and they told
me I would have to sterilise/fumigate the soil with methy bromide.
I was enough of an organic gardener at this stage not to accept this advice.
I finally found, in an old Rodale publication , a control method which was
to:-
 1. mulch the soil heavily
 and
 2.apply lots of sugar.
 This worked, controlling the nematodes, and my garden started to thrive.

I found out later that I was (with the warm moisture of the mulch and the
sugar) encouraging the growth of the root-knot nematode's predator - a yeast
like organism (Photo in Brooklyn Botanic Garden's book on Biological
Control).

I now live in an outer-suburban area of Sydney.
 A lot of virgin bush and old farms are being tuned into housing estates.
The local council asks developers to collect seeds of native plants, before
they clear the land, propagate these plants and replant with some of these
plants when the estate is built. A well-meaning idea.

It worries me that we are not also collecting the existing soil zoology. We
have probably named only about 10% of the soil micro-organisms that live in
Australian soil.
 It seems to me that every climatic area, every country and every soil type
has its own special "suite" of soil micro-flora/fauna. I feel we should be
doing more to examine, preserve and understand these as well as preserving
local plants.

Similarly, I am concerned that gardeners, by adding commercial "critter"
mixes of bacteria and fungi,   will be destroying the aboriginal zoology.

Apart from throwing a lot of (always scarce) soil research money at it, I
see little hope of preserving what may be unique, and potentially valuable,
soil micro-organisms.
 If they were creatures living in rainforests everyone would be "up in
arms".
 The truth is, there is probably more living organisms in sq. meter of soil
than in any rain-forest

Michael Bailes.
"Human beings,
who are almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of
others,
are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so."
Douglas Adams, "Last Chance to See"

On 24/04/07, Michael N Trevor <mtrevor at ntamar.net> wrote:
>
> The soils chemistry debates here may be getting a bit esoteric, can anyone
> provide some simple
> advise?
> Does anyone know if sugar is actually harmful?
>
>


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