top of page
Search
Writer's picture

Remembering a Legend: SubCool's Super Soil


RIP Subcool, Master Grower and Legendary Cannabis Breeder


Dave Bowman, known to the cannabis world as Subcool, died on Feb. 1. He had been ill for quite some time, battling Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency and emphysema, as well as the fallout from a divorce and a California wildfire that took nearly everything from him.


We want to ensure that Subcool's memory lives on by continuing his life's work of cultivating and breeding the tastiest, and most aromatic, organic cannabis flowers on Earth. He believed that nothing could compare to the flavor of properly grown organic cannabis: 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.


Subcool's super soil is the best soil for growing hemp or any other kind of cannabis for that matter. We can tell you that from experience. We’ve been making our own super soil following Subcool’s original super soil recipe for years. And as a result we’ve been growing and some really excellent organic hemp.


Subcool's Super Soil Ingredients


You probably already have a lot of the ingredients to create Subcool super soil already. You might find some of the ingredients at a grow store near you and save on shipping costs. However a few of the thing’s you’ll need to create the famous Subcool Super Soil mix could be hard to find. So here are the exact ingredients found in TGA Subcool Supersoil all sourced from Amazon.com. SubCool used and recommended these following products:



What is Subcool’s Super Soil?


The term super soil started being used widely after Subcool released his recipe and specific set of instructions for creating composted soil that delivers everything cannabis plants need, at exactly the right time, without having to manage pH or add extra nutrients—all you have to do is just add water.


Anyhow to make things easy we scored a 25-pound pack of SubCool’s Super Soil Fertilizer so we wouldn’t have to source all the ingredients. In addition to the fertilizer pack we grabbed a bag of Roots Organic Big Worms worm castings and five 1.5 cubic ft bags of Roots Organics soil. We decided to split the pack in half and make only 7.5 cubic feet of soil because the grow in this particular location isn’t very large. This came about to about two 32-gallon garbage cans full of Super Soil.


If you’re interested in making SubCool’s super soil yourself check out these directions from SubCool below:


Subcool’s Super Soil Recipe and Instructions


Story by Subcool, photos by Subcool & MzJill


To me there is nothing like the flavor of properly grown organic cannabis. The subtle flavors and aromas created when using mother earth is overwhelming to the senses when done properly.


As with many vegetables a rich Organic soil can bring out the best in a plant. 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 have developed a soil that performs extremely well and there’s very little guess work. I don’t worry about ph or ppm I simply have spent a few years developing a sound recipe and in combination with 7 gallon nursery pots I can run from start to finish using only water. Other than a bit of sweat equity every 90 days or so it takes a huge amount of science out of the garden and puts nature back in charge. This recipe is slightly different from my last and from the one so many use as gospel that I have passed around for years from grower to grower.


I always start with at least 6-8 large bags of high quality organic soil. The selection of your base soil is very important so don’t cut corners here. I cannot begin to discuss all the different products but I will discuss a few in this article. A good Organic soil should cost between 8-10$ per 30# bag. I want you to get a real good idea what I consider a balanced soil to be so take a look at the ingredients of a product called Roots Organic:

Lignite*, coca fiber, perlite, pumice, compost, peat moss, bone meal, bat guano, kelp meal, Green sand, soy bean meal, leonardite, k-mag, glacial rock dust, alfalfa meal, oyster shell flour, earth worm castings and Mycorrhizae.


I have always believed in giving my plants a wide range of soils and additives I figure it’s like a buffet they get all they need.


“Lignite, also known as leonardite, mined lignin, brown coal, and slack, is an important constituent to the oil well, drilling industry. Lignite, or leonardite as it will be referred as hereafter, is technically known as a low rank coal between peat and sub-bituminous. Leonardite was named for Dr. A.G. Leonard, North Dakota’s first state geologist, who was a pioneer in the study of lignite deposits. Leonardite is applied to products having a high content of humic acid. Humic acid has been found to be very useful as a drilling mud thinner.”


Another local product we are trying now is called Harvest Moon. 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. The Roots produced a more floral smell in the finished flowers while the Harvest Moon generated larger yields.


If you have access to a good local mix like these then I highly recommend starting with these type products. We have also had decent results using commercial brands as well but not as is. The best results we have seen from well known soil that is available nationwide is Fox Farms “Ocean Forest” soil combined in a 2-1 ratio with Light Warrior. On it’s own the Ocean Forrest is known for burning plants and having the wrong ratios of nutrients but when cut down with Light Warrior it makes a pretty good mix for a base soil.


You can also just use 2 bales of Sunshine mix #4 but this is my last choice and plants growing in this may not complete properly with this “Just add water” method of soil growing. The concept to this concentrated soil is to not have to worry with mixing up nutrients after the soil is made. The concentrate is placed in the bottom quarter to half of the container and blended with base soil. This allows the plants to grow into the strong concentrated soil and in the right size container need nothing else but water throughout the full harvest cycle. With strains requiring high levels of nutrients we go as strong as three-quarters of the container with Super Soil but this is only with a small percentage of strains.


Here are the amounts we have found that produce the best tasting buds and strongest medicines:


  • 8- Large bags of High quality Organic potting soil with a coco and Mycorrhizae

  • 1- 25-50 pounds of Organic Worm castings

  • 5 lb. Steamed Bone meal

  • 5 lb. Bloom bat Guano

  • 5 lb. Blood meal

  • 3 lb. Rock Phosphate

  • ¾ cup Epson salts

  • ½ to 1 Cup cup Sweet Lime ( Dolomite)

  • ½ Cup Azomite ( Trace Elements)

  • 2 tbs. Powdered Humic Acid


This is the same basic recipe I have used for 15 years the hardest ingredient to acquire is the worm castings most people don’t even know what it is. Be resourceful and find it worms make up three quarters of the living organisms underground btw and hold our planet together. Be careful not to waste money on Soil Conditioner with worm casting but local Pure Worm poop with no added mulch.


There are several methods of mixing this up well. You can sweep off a patio or garage and work there on a tarp. You can use a kids plastic wading pool these cost about 10$ and work really well for a few seasons. Some growers have been known to rent a cement mixer and cut down on the physical labor. As long as you get the ingredients mixed up properly that is all that matters. This can be a lot of work so don’t pull a muscle if your not used to strenuous activity. This method is good for mind and body. Working with soil keeps me in pretty good shape, but if you have limitations you can simply have someone mix it up for you while you supervise. One of the things I like about this method is I can drop of plants to a patient and all they have to do is water the plants when the soil dries out.


Place a few bags of base soil in first making a mound. I then place the powdered nutrients in a circle around the mound and then cover with another bag of base soil.


Then goes in the bat poop and then more base soil. I continue to layer soil and additives until everything has been added to the pile. So now I put on the muck boots, these help me kick the soil around and get it mixed up well using my larger leg muscles and not my back and arms. Then it’s as simple as my Skipper used to say “ Put your back into it”. This is hard work that I obsess on, even breaking up all the clods of soil by hand. I mix for about 15 minutes, turning the pile over and over until it is mixed well. I store the mix in large garbage cans. Before using the mix the entire load is poured out once more and mixed well. Once placed in the containers I water it slightly adding 3 gallons of water to a large garbage can full. It will make the stirring harder next week but it will activate the Mycorrhizae and I think help all the powders dissolve.


So now we add water and let it cook in the sunshine. 30 days is best for this concentrate.


Do not put seeds or clones directly in this mix. It is an advanced mix used in conjunction with base soil. It is used to place in the bottom of each finishing container and fully rooted established clones are placed in a bed of base soil that is layered on top of the concentrate. As the plants grow they slowly push their roots into the super soil drawing up all nutrients needed for a full cycle. The Super Soil can be used also to topdress plants that take longer to mature.


I will use this mix for a full year just adding like 30-50% in the lower portion of the container and plain base soil in the top portion. Base Soil means your regular potting soil Like Roots, Harvest Moon, or even sunshine mix without the additives!


Buds from this method finish with a fade and a smoother fruity flavor. The plants are not green when done but Purple, Red, Orange and even Black at times. The resin content is heavier and the terpenes always seem to be more pungent.


This method is used by cannabis growers all over with amazing results. The feedback I receive is really positive with reports of Hydro-like growth and novice growers producing buds of the same quality as life long growers.


Sources:


Contributors:

Dave "SubCool" Bowman

MzJill

Eric Sandy Erik Sinclair

Joseph Jackson

3,828 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

コメント


bottom of page