What is inoculation, charging and activating?
Inoculation refers to the addition of microbes to the biochar, whereas charging refers to the addition of nutrients. Activating biochar is the collective term when you both inoculate and charge the material. Both of these can be done by mixing biochar with a compost. Beneficial microbes can be harvested from an aerobic compost tea and nutrients can be added via animal manure, organic matter and inorganic fertilisers.
There are lots of inoculation and charging recipes on the web. It is likely that specific ‘brews’ will work in different situations and as there are lots of variables, we will be testing our own formulations in due course.
Biochar can be inoculated with any of the organic/inorganic ingredients above to help boost the effect within the soil.
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Biochar can be added directly to your home compost, as an activator and given enough time the combined material can be added to the soil for amendment.
Note: Using raw biochar as a soil amendment
If you spread raw biochar into any soil, initially it will act like a sponge, absorbing water and attracting nutrients/minerals from the soil around it and making them less available to the surrounding plants. This can have a detrimental effect on plant health and crop yield, as they will struggle to grow and can eventually die or provide a poor harvest. However, in some cases, you may want to reduce the quality of the soil for plants and crops that prefer poor soil conditions.
How and where can biochar be applied as a soil conditioner?