It does bring up a couple of interesting points about biochar. First, the moss seems healthy. Moss needs two things from substrate; moisture retention and support. There can be some trace mineral extraction but that can come from above, too. Biochar has a lot of capacity to store moisture and nutrients, but at least initially, it is nutrient poor. So nice to see the moss doing fine. Second, biochar processing has to include some means of not just producing it, but also amending soil with it or otherwise putting it out of reach as a fuel (which these pieces have not yet been “finished”). Until it is in soil or some comparable un-burnable resting place, it is just charcoal - still could be tossed on the, um “barbie”? (sorry moss).
I would agree. Biochar and charcoal are fundamentally different, and it’s unfortunate that the two get conflated. Biochar is produced at higher temperatures then charcoal and doesn’t add to atmospheric carbon dioxide levels during production (if produced correctly). On the other hand charcoal is produced at lower temperatures and is not clean to produce so does add to atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.
I think you are right that the making of biochar vs charcoal is all about the maker’s intent. But I would not rest easy until I know the biochar is committed to the destination for which I intended it. I lived in the Dominican Republis for a while, and it would have been a very bad idea to leave chunks of biochar lying on the ground! They would have been quickly “found” by the local poor Haitian farm workers and put to their traditional use - cooking.
I am doing some experiments right now with making and eventually growing with biochar. The US Forest service says biochar can be added to woodland soil at a rate of about 270 tonnes per hectare - any idea how that works out, or what mix rate range might be good for adding biochar to garden soil. My plan is to try a range of ratios and characterize my soil by sand:silt:clay proportion - I guess clayey soils might benefit from a higher proportion of biochar.
It does bring up a couple of interesting points about biochar. First, the moss seems healthy. Moss needs two things from substrate; moisture retention and support. There can be some trace mineral extraction but that can come from above, too. Biochar has a lot of capacity to store moisture and nutrients, but at least initially, it is nutrient poor. So nice to see the moss doing fine. Second, biochar processing has to include some means of not just producing it, but also amending soil with it or otherwise putting it out of reach as a fuel (which these pieces have not yet been “finished”). Until it is in soil or some comparable un-burnable resting place, it is just charcoal - still could be tossed on the, um “barbie”? (sorry moss).
deleted by creator
I would agree. Biochar and charcoal are fundamentally different, and it’s unfortunate that the two get conflated. Biochar is produced at higher temperatures then charcoal and doesn’t add to atmospheric carbon dioxide levels during production (if produced correctly). On the other hand charcoal is produced at lower temperatures and is not clean to produce so does add to atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.
this seems like a pretty good general overview: https://rosysoil.com/blogs/news/biochar-vs-charcoal
I think you are right that the making of biochar vs charcoal is all about the maker’s intent. But I would not rest easy until I know the biochar is committed to the destination for which I intended it. I lived in the Dominican Republis for a while, and it would have been a very bad idea to leave chunks of biochar lying on the ground! They would have been quickly “found” by the local poor Haitian farm workers and put to their traditional use - cooking.
I am doing some experiments right now with making and eventually growing with biochar. The US Forest service says biochar can be added to woodland soil at a rate of about 270 tonnes per hectare - any idea how that works out, or what mix rate range might be good for adding biochar to garden soil. My plan is to try a range of ratios and characterize my soil by sand:silt:clay proportion - I guess clayey soils might benefit from a higher proportion of biochar.
deleted by creator