Hello all can any of you fine fermenters give a little direction here. I am going to be attempting my own ferments and have been reading up on fermenting dynamic accumulators . I will be growing my own accumulators starting with the comfrey I just planted! Any ways in my research I came across the Moringa tree ( and damn if it don’t sound like a lot of bang for your buck !) Any thoughts?
I have grown it indoors. If you search "Moringa" you can see the ones I grew for someone. I do recall a member from Hawaii that used Moringa with great success. I believe it was FickySiskers. Nettles is another great dynamic accumulator to collect.
It gets talked about a lot in permaculture circles: Amazing Moringa: Medicinal, Edible & Easy to Grow
I am researching what is and is not possible to grow indoors, stinging nettles/dandelions/horsetail/mallow/chickweed and a few more. Some I will grow for mulching and some others to ferment, even thought about pumpkin indoors, as for now I won’t be dealing with a large plant count more than likely only 4 at a time , so I won’t have to worry so much about having great volumes of things to ferment, I’d really like to find what will give me the most bang for the dollar! @TimJ thanks by the way ! I’ve got my fish fermenting now !
@TimJ I know this might be off topic a bit, do you know much about bamboo? I seen somewhere someone had used it as mulch ! Just thought it to be interesting to find out what the benefits may be besides silica content.
I'm not sure about bamboo. I have read about it somewhere on this site, I just can't remember where. We do not have bamboo locally where I live only Japanese Knotweed. It looks similar.
If you’re looking for the most bang for your buck it’s probably growing already in your backyard. Or it’s out in the woods or down by the river. Last year I fertilized my greenhouse plants with nothing but FPE. I also had the opportunity to really test it on some zucchini plants that were fading really fast in 5g buckets. It really amazed me how much it greened them up! Veggie Garden 2022