A good read!

You are so poor you can afford a good sized planted tank?:p:

I always wonder about it, but many of us aquarist, myself on many levels, are of the Church of the Cheap.

Sometimes this gets the better of us.
I've done both, I learned this lesson.

But perhaps others are fine with it, much like using DIY CO2 vs gas tank CO2.
Both work and one group is way cheaper, but one can help folks get a feel, then justify the other later.

I use a good clay soil myself, I pay nothing for it, it's USDA class 1 soil from a freshwater delta, pretty much the same as ADA AS as far as properties that matter.

Most richer clay soils are going to yield longer term results and less mess.
Potting soil is pretty rich in nutrients and organic matter. Boiling can be right away, then mix whatever the heck some folks assume are important to their method, none of that stuff really is IMO/IME.

I do not think many of the extra things added really are helping that much, but they do not hurt either........some think it does matter, but have not shown it really does:cool:

Big difference there.

Still, using nutrients in the sediment is a nice back up, or even primary source, but I think using both locations offers the planted aquarist the best management for nutrients. If you forget/nbeglect one, you have a back up for the other........if the sediment is missing something or slowly declines........or you want it to last longer......then adding water column ferts will help.

Folks loose sight of synthesis, and think only in "either" "or".
Oddly, they do not test these things individually as far as different treatments for the soil.

Even the ADA crowd, they claimed you need to add everything, the power sand, the ECA, ,tourmaline, Penac and all the other snake oils. When in fact, it was 95% the ADA aqua soil.

I'd say this is true for most soil concoctions.

Whatever gets you there though, the issues downstream are minor.

Regards,
Tom Barr
 
I myself find the whole I am too poor to buy such and such (good product that will indefinitely help or fix my problem) a silly statement, even as I wrote it! But I already have the tank, a complete pressurized CO2 system with inline reactor & drop checker, decent lights (ahsupply), dry ferts, etc. from a previous tank, so as far as new purchases go I will be spending a few bucks on clay for the soil (or sand & worm casting for wormstrate) which is no where near the cost of ADA AS. Besides I am a DIY type of girl and MTS is just something I really want to try. :p:

All I will be adding to my top soil is potash (because I have it) & clay (which I might also have) so I am right there with you about not adding all the extras. And I do plan to add water column ferts in conjunction with nutrient rich soil as well. Lower light, good co2 & ferts, good circulation & keep it clean, sound familiar? :D
 
I myself find the whole I am too poor to buy such and such (good product that will indefinitely help or fix my problem) a silly statement, even as I wrote it! But I already have the tank, a complete pressurized CO2 system with inline reactor & drop checker, decent lights (ahsupply), dry ferts, etc. from a previous tank, so as far as new purchases go I will be spending a few bucks on clay for the soil (or sand & worm casting for wormstrate) which is no where near the cost of ADA AS. Besides I am a DIY type of girl and MTS is just something I really want to try. :p:

All I will be adding to my top soil is potash (because I have it) & clay (which I might also have) so I am right there with you about not adding all the extras. And I do plan to add water column ferts in conjunction with nutrient rich soil as well. Lower light, good co2 & ferts, good circulation & keep it clean, sound familiar? :D

Well, you have the CO2 gas tank, so you are way ahead there. DIY vs CO2 is the big leap for most.

A place to cut the corner,: DIY lighting.......less is better. So you did well on both counts.

DIY is fun and has some merits.

Regards,
Tom Barr
 
A good read thanks for sharing, I have run across this method before and another method that states leaving the soil out on a tarp in a thin layer for a week in a dry environment will provide the same purpose. Sadly I have been unable to preform either methods since I live in an apt and my better half will not allow the indoor garden smell.
 
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