Subcool's Super Soil

Looking at No-Till resources I’ve tried to find any info about original TGA Subcool Super Soil article that was published in High Times, but that URL was unfortunately removed from online magazine. Luckily I’ve found it on archive.org, so I’ve reconstructed it and I’m reposting it here with pictures.

As I understand it (correct me if I’m wrong) it forms some basis of organic farming.

Subcool’s Super Soil Step-by-Step

Fri Aug 07, 2009

Story by Subcool, photos by Subcool & MzJill

There’s nothing that compares to the flavor of properly grown organic pot: The subtle tastes and aromas created by using only “Mother Earth” are overwhelming to the senses when it’s done properly. As with vegetables, a rich organic soil can bring out the best in cannabis.

Over the past 20 years, I have tried almost every possible way to cultivate our favorite plant. And while hydro is certainly faster and the yields blow soil away, I’ve developed an organic-soil mix that consistently performs extremely well, with very little guesswork involved (i.e., I don’t have to worry about pH or ppms ever).

I spent a few years developing the recipe for this Super Soil mix, and using it in 7-gallon nursery pots, I can run from start to finish adding only plain water. Other than a bit of sweat equity every 90 days or so, using this soil takes a huge amount of the science out of gardening and puts nature back in charge. Also, the recipe is always changing in slight ways as I continue to fine-tune it in my efforts to achieve perfection.

The Base

Start with at least six to eight large bags of high-quality organic soil. This is your base soil—i.e., your regular potting soil without the additives. The selection of your base soil is very important, so don’t cut corners here. I can’t begin to discuss all the different products out there, but I will mention a few in this article. A good organic soil should cost you from $8 to $10 per 30-pound bag. Since I want to give you a very specific idea of what I consider to be a balanced soil, take a look at the ingredients in a product called Roots Organic:

Lignite, coco fiber, perlite, pumice, compost, peat moss, bone meal, bat guano, kelp meal, greensand, soybean meal, leonardite, k-mag, glacial rock dust, alfalfa meal, oyster shell flour, earthworm castings and mycorrhizae.

Another local product we’re trying out now, Harvest Moon, has the following ingredients:

Washed coco fibers, Alaskan peat moss, perlite, yucca, pumice, diatoms, worm castings, feather meal, fishmeal, kelp meal, limestone, gypsum, soybean meal, alfalfa meal, rock dust, yucca meal and mycorrhizae fungi.

So far we’ve found that Roots Organic produces a more floral smell in the finished buds, while Harvest Moon generates larger yields.

If you have access to a good local mix like these, then I highly recommend starting with a product of this type. We’ve also had decent results using commercial brands, but never “as is.” The best results we’ve had to date using a well-known commercial soil has been with Fox Farms’ Ocean Forest soil combined in a 2-to-1 ratio with Light Warrior. Used on its own, Ocean Forest is known for burning plants and having the wrong ratio of nutrients, but when cut with Light Warrior, it makes a pretty good base-soil mix.

You can also just use two bales of Sunshine Mix #4, but this would be my last choice, since plants grown in this mix may not respond well to my “just add water” method of growing.

After choosing your base soil, the Super Soil concentrate is placed in the bottom one-third to one-half of the container and blended with the base soil. (With strains that require high levels of nutrients, we’ll go so far as to fill ¾ of the container with Super Soil, but this is necessary only with a small percentage of strains.) This allows the plants to grow into the concentrated Super Soil layer, which means that in the right size container, they’ll need nothing but water throughout their full cycle. One of the things I like best about this soil mix is that I can drop off plants with patients, and all they have to do is water them when the soil dries out.

Stir It Up

There are several ways to mix these ingredients well. You can sweep up a patio or garage and work there on a tarp, or you can use a plastic wading pool for kids. (These cost about 10 bucks apiece and work really well for a few seasons.) Some growers have been known to rent a cement mixer to cut down on the physical labor. Whatever method you use, all that matters in the end is that you get the ingredients mixed properly.

This can be a lot of work, so be careful not to pull a muscle if you’re not used to strenuous activity. On the other hand, the physical effort involved is good for mind and body, and working with soil has kept me in pretty good shape. But if you have physical limitations, you can simply have someone mix it up for you while you supervise. As far as the proper steps go: Pour a few bags of base soil into your mixing container first, making a mound. Then pour the powdered nutrients in a circle around the mound and cover everything with another bag of base soil. In goes the bat poop and then more base soil. I continue this process of layering soil and additives until everything has been added to the pile.

Now I put on my muck boots, which help me kick the soil around and get it mixed up well using my larger and stronger leg muscles instead of my arms. The rest is simple; as my skipper used to say, “Put your back into it.” This is hard work that I obsess over, even breaking up all the soil clods by hand. I work on the pile for at least 15 minutes, turning the soil over and over until it’s thoroughly mixed.

Then I store my Super Soil in large garbage cans. (And before using any of it, I pour the entire load out and mix it well once more.) Once it’s placed in the cans, I water it slightly—adding three gallons of water to each large garbage can’s worth. Though it makes stirring the soil harder, adding water will activate the mycorrhizae and help all the powders dissolve.

Before Planting

So we’ve added the water, and now we let it cook in the sunshine—30 days is best for this concentrate. Do not put seeds or clones directly into this Super Soil mix or they will burn. This is an advanced recipe to be used in conjunction with base soil. First you place a layer of Super Soil at the bottom of each finishing container; then you layer a bed of base soil on top of the Super Soil concentrate; and then you transplant your fully rooted, established clones into the bed of base soil. As the plants grow, they’ll slowly push their roots through the base soil and into the Super Soil, drawing up all the nutrients they need for a full life cycle. The Super Soil can be also be used to top-dress plants that take longer to mature. I’ll use this mix for a full year.

Buds grown with this method finish with a fade and a smoother, fruitier flavor. The plants aren’t green at harvest time, but rather purple, red, orange, even black—plus the resin content is heavier, and the terpenes always seem more pungent. This method is now being used by medical growers all over the world, and with amazing results. The feedback I’ve received is really positive, including reports of hydro-like growth and novice growers producing buds of the same high quality as lifelong cultivators. So give it a try! You won’t be disappointed.

The Mix

Here are the amounts we’ve found will produce the best-tasting buds and strongest medicines:

  • 8 large bags of a high-quality organic potting soil with coco fiber and mycorrhizae (i.e., your base soil)
  • 25 to 50 lbs of organic worm castings
  • 5 lbs steamed bone meal
  • 5 lbs Bloom bat guano
  • 5 lbs blood meal
  • 3 lbs rock phosphate
  • ¾ cup Epson salts
  • ½ cup sweet lime (dolomite)
  • ½ cup azomite (trace elements)
  • 2 tbsp powdered humic acid

This is the same basic recipe I’ve been using for the past 15 years. The hardest ingredient to acquire are the worm castings (especially since many people don’t even know what they are. FYI: worm poop). But don’t decide to just skip them: Be resourceful. After all, worms comprise up to ¾ of the living organisms found underground, and they’re crucial to holding our planet together. Also, don’t waste money on a “soil conditioner” with worm castings; source out some local pure worm poop with no added mulch.

Subcool is the author of Dank: The Quest for the Very Best Marijuana, available at dankgearonline.com.

THIS ARTICLE WAS FEATURED IN THE MARCH 2009 ISSUE OF HIGH TIMES

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Personally don’t care for this mix. Personally don’t care for anything Subfool is pushing (another story for another day). The last 10 years I’ve transitioned to My own version of High Brix, via International AG Labs out of Minnesota. I don’t care for Docbud and his High Brix version either, just too much bs with his mess, simple is key in MJ growing. Not getting caught up in over Intellectualizing a very simple plant and a natural process is best for me…

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Thanks for your comment, I’d love to hear more if you are willing to share the whole story…

I was trying to find info about No-Till, now very popular method, which I have missed completely (being 99% hydroponic grower myself). I was hoping to get “to the roots” of the method and find where this phenomenon started…

I’ve dug this Super Soil as “the keyword” associated with No-till, but as I understand it No-Till means also continuous decomposition during the grow itself.

So far my only soil method was BioBizz All-Mix (rich) or Light-Mix (1/2) and some Bat Guano if available. So very simple… From my observation Lightmix was knocked out in 2 weeks, All-mix lasted maybe 3-4 weeks of vegetation. And of course in bloom I was adding Biobizz Bloom.

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I ran it it was good, I think you still need to hit it with teas, PH was 6.5- 7 when I ran it.

Things I didn’t like when running as directed:

I thought things got a little too high in N, and I want to delete the use of blood meal. I just dont like working with blood meal, I did wait at least a month, and did the layering as outlined. Its a bit odd really, its like an upside down topdress,

I think gypsum should be in the formula. Just because of the sodium in guanos and the addition of epsoms.

Just thinking out loud, but could you mix everything together, and let it “cook” and use it as a topdress with a 1-2 inch layer on some premium soil?.

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This was a good starting point for organic growing. Not everything listed is easily sourced, depending on your locale. Started with this mix, then tried Clacks mix and a couple others. As time went by (a year or so) and my skills increased, I went with a personal mix as probably most of you do. Using a pre-made mix, like subs, is for beginners IMO and is an awesome start. Once you get the hang of things you have to add less and less additives, learn composting, listen to the plants, and basically get used to which additives are actually being used every grow. I recycle all my soil, it gets a rotation in the pile outside over winter, then back in a bucket. I usually add bonemeal and a few goodies(depending how the plant grew that turn) right as the soil comes out from the grow. Adding mixes and using the soil too soon (2 months isn’t enough cooking) will give inconsitent results in my experience. Compost is the biggest addition to the pile (6 composters out back) and the pile just gets bigger and bigger and sweeter. I only have so much room (small personal size) so the pile grows so big I make raised vegetable gardens for the family. It gets easier and cheaper every go round and the finished product, whether it be tomatoes or carrots or herb, gets better and better. It’s also good for the environment. IMO anyone can grow soilless with a recipe and/or bottle nutes, but really ya don’t learn shit about plants. Get dirty grow organic and remember. The best tasting dankest shit always grows in shit. Have a shitty day OG’ers and get off the bottle. Puff, Puff, pass.

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Sub used Vic High recipe and then made it the way he liked it. When you mix this up you need a grow room dialed in. People mixed up the Subcool mix not really understanding how to grow and burnt up thier plants. Sub built some expensive grow rooms that moved a lot air and could get perfect temps. He used cool dark periods to get those nice colors.

I am not going to hate on Subcool and never chatted with him. What I saw was a guy that dropped a ton of cash on learning how to grow and and made the best of it the only way he knew how. When I say spending cash here is what he used to build.

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“8 large bags of a high-quality organic potting soil with coco fiber and mycorrhizae (i.e., your base soil)
25 to 50 lbs of organic worm castings”

Just guestimating here, the foundation of subs formula is Premuim Soil (like Promix BX) + 15 To 25% EWC by volume,

That alone, will make a huge difference in P & K uptake EWC makes PK easier to uptake. As well as a huge microbe population.

From there you could adjust your other Macro Nutrients and Trace Minerals.

Just throwing it out there, but you could eliminate a few things and use others like bone meal, If you wanted to use traditional hot compost that has eggshells to replace bone meal, and I prefer veggie based compost over any guanos or manures. I would rather use kelp meal over blood meal,

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I am not sure if this is an accurate VH Mix but it looks like it. Just reading GrowerGoneWild other post I would follow GGW suggestions on growing.

1 bale of promix
15-30 lbs. of wormcastings
4 cups of dried blood
8 cups of bone meal
4 cups of kelp
4 cups of dolomite lime
1 1/3 cups of epsom salt

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they probaly deleted it because… who the hell wants to buy all that garbage and mix up soil every cycle when all you need is kelp, neem, malted barley, gypsum, and glacial rock dustXD

Pre 90 it was trade secrets. Passed in Pen Pal Clubs lol. Now its expensive and called second string info. It will grow some nice buds.

In the old days if a man had to travel for a living his partner could just water for him and all was good.
On his way back home he could stop by the NAPA Store and get some White Engine Block Paint to help reflect light of his hood and walls. The mix would beat 20-20-20 and 10-52-10 lol.

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you should get out mountain organics on instagram and on grasscity. also bluejay on grasscity. hes the guy i learned from and i owe it all to him. now clackamas coot. hes the man that gave bluejay (mountain organics) his ideas for no till and slowly made it better. coot doesnt do notill he does ROLS there are a few people that ran notill before bluejay but hes the guys that made it incredibly popular. he has two threads notill and notill revisited. both have sooooooooooooo much info on notill and the history of no till. coot will also show you how much youre getting ripped off every day paying for all these nutrients out there when all you need is some kelp and neem mealXD

I prefer Roots Organics mediums and nutrient systems (especially the Dry Nutrients Player Pack) to FoxFarm.

Roots organics has had a bunch of problems with their soil. its too outta whack to be consistent.

I’ve had no issues, besides the 707 holding a lot of water like it’s supposed to. I have had 3 3CuFt bags. All have been consistent and have performed excellently.

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Its good to hear they are getting better:)

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