[Terrapreta] On the practical side

Sean K. Barry sean.barry at juno.com
Sat Apr 19 20:12:08 CDT 2008


Hi Max,

This is a nice experimental update.  I liked this part best ...

Corn, broad beans and basil were planted in both. Definitely germination was better in the char bed and definitely initial growth was also more vigorous. Unfortunately the wallabies broke the fence ending that trial, but the fence has been reinforced and the beds planted again. This time I've added a third bed the same as the first with the char, compost and NPK, but added 5 cm of worm castings from my composting worm experimental pile. (I believe composting worms have equivalent miracle capacity as does char).

 

Your view on worms is outstanding!  Keep up the good work and ask Christelle Braun (she is on the 'terrapreta'  list) how you can get your experiments entered into the Terra Preta Experimental database.

Regards,

SKB
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Tom Miles<mailto:tmiles at trmiles.com> 
  To: 'Terra Preta'<mailto:terrapreta at bioenergylists.org> 
  Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2008 7:28 PM
  Subject: Re: [Terrapreta] On the practical side


  Max,

   

  Dr. Ogawa showed us that if you spread charcoal on the ground you can pull the worms up. 

  See:

  Effect of charcoal on the root growth and nodule formation of Acacia mangium in Indonesia (Okimori, Yamato 2000) in Effects of Soil Microbial Fertility by Charcoal in Soil<http://www.georgiaitp.org/carbon/PDF%20Files/MOgawa.pdf> http://www.georgiaitp.org/carbon/PDF%20Files/MOgawa.pdf<http://www.georgiaitp.org/carbon/PDF%20Files/MOgawa.pdf> 

  "Forest floor of Acacia plantation was covered by rice husk charcoal 5 cm in depth. Earthworm population increased soon after the treatment because of neutralization of top soil."

   

  Do worms find charcoal in a compost pile or do you have to inoculate the pile with worm castings as you have done?

   

  Tom

   

   

   

  From: terrapreta-bounces at bioenergylists.org [mailto:terrapreta-bounces at bioenergylists.org] On Behalf Of MFH
  Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2008 5:14 PM
  To: 'Terra Preta'
  Subject: [Terrapreta] On the practical side

   

  See images: http://terrapreta.bioenergylists.org/henderson041908<http://terrapreta.bioenergylists.org/henderson041908>

   

  Dear All,

   

  For those on the list who haven't had the opportunity to experiment, here are some photos of my first trials. Apologies to those who are well ahead of this stage.

   

  Photo 1 shows the very basic kiln, constructed of un-bonded second-hand bricks and sized to take a 200 litre drum (55 gallon in he US). This particular drum has a removable lid held in place with an over-centre clamp.

   

  Photo 2 shows the drum in place and loaded with seasoned offcuts of local hardwoods such as Ironbark (Euc piniculata), which is hard and dense. The drum is raised off the brick floor the height of 2 bricks to allow firewood to be placed under.  The base of the drum (on its side) is drilled with 8 x 8mm holes in a line evenly spaced. These permit the generated gases to exit and burn.

   

  3 shows the flames after the load has started to gassify. Depending in the intensity of the external fire and the sizes, moisture content and density of the timber load, the beginning of the gasification phase can take from 30 minutes upwards.

   

  4 and 5 show the char output.

   

  Photo 6 gives an idea of the vast amount of energy released. At this trial the front of the kiln was also bricked up once the fire had started, to further concentrate the heat. For pure spectacle this is best done at night, preferably lubricated with copious cold beers. This is indeed hot and thirsty work. What you can't hear is the whistling of the gas as it exits the holes in the drum, and the roar of the fire. Obviously there is huge opportunity to capture surplus gas and compress to store.

   

  7 shows the first experimental vegetable bed prior to planting, approx 4m x 1.2m. The char was broken up before adding but this could have been done much better. Around 10cm thickness was added to the bed. Also added was 5 cm of compost and 1 kg of NPK fertiliser (13:13:15 + 2Mg). The bed was then forked a number of times to a 20cm depth. For comparison purposes an adjacent bed was prepared in the same manner including the compost and the NPK, but no added char.

   

  Corn, broad beans and basil were planted in both. Definitely germination was better in the char bed and definitely initial growth was also more vigorous. Unfortunately the wallabies broke the fence ending that trial, but the fence has been reinforced and the beds planted again. This time I've added a third bed the same as the first with the char, compost and NPK, but added 5 cm of worm castings from my composting worm experimental pile. (I believe composting worms have equivalent miracle capacity as does char).

   

  The test site is just above the creek flats on land that was a dairy farm for maybe 100 years before being abandoned some 20 years ago and allowed to return to natural forest, mainly eucalypts. Around 5 acres have been cleared. Soil texture is loamy, with recent tests indicating deficiencies across the full range of nutrients. Annual rainfall is in the 1500mm range. Being a fairly civilised part of the world we don't have any of that snow stuff but winter daytime temps can plunge horrifically to 10 deg C (50F), with occasional night time frosts. Terrifying. Right now we're at the beginning of Autumn.

   

  I'll update in a couple of weeks.

   

  Max H

   

   

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