milehigh_7
Mister 500,000
I'm also a bit skeptical of DE drying out roots. Is this just anecdotal or is there any data backing it up?
It's as solid as anecdotal can be

I'm also a bit skeptical of DE drying out roots. Is this just anecdotal or is there any data backing it up?
That's where mine came from. And that's what it should be called everywhere. When I see "DE" I think of the fine particles used to filter H20 or repel slugs/snails.
OK, there are two facts here.
1. The microscopic stucture of akadama is tubular.
2. Roots penetrate akadama and break it into smaller particles.
Both of these facts have been demonstrated. Ryan has communicated to me and to others (in class, not on the live streams) that the second fact follows from the first and, since no other bonsai substrate exhibits the same behavior, it doesn’t take a great leap of faith to believe that this is the case. Regardless of the reason, the objective results are the same.
I can accept those as facts but the ascribed relation is anecdotal.
You can reason and present hypothesis for anything but it doesn't mean it's true. It's just a possibility. Just because Ryan said it am I supposed to accept it as true?
I can understand the benefits of akadama but as far as the mechanism and interaction between the roots there's nothing there to prove the behavior is as Ryan says other than just his word. As I recall akadama is decomposed pumice? If so it is probable that it does have pores and networking throughout the particle. But you have to consider scale of these holes and compare it to the scale of the root tip. Certainly not large enough for penetration. I think breaking of akadama more has to do with the integrity of the particles and the fact they retain some air and moisture. The root tips are attracted to the akadama bearing O2 and air and the unfired akadama is soft enough to be split by the roots. This would be macroscopic behavior and not the implied microscopic behavior of roots entering these very small tubes.
This brings up a second point in that the key value for your third soil component lies within the balance of water and air retention properties. (CEC as well although that is a different discussion) Which is why DE, not bearing a network of pores or tubes, is a candidate as a good alternative.
.008 inches is 203.2 microns. I'll see if I can dig out my SEM images of pumice but assuming akadama has a comparative networked structure those pores are around the range of 10-50 microns in size. I just can't see such a large root infiltrating very small tunnels.Partially with you....
I looked it up...
.008 inch or 1/125 inch is the size of the fine root hairs....only in deciduous tree.
Myc is the conifer system.
Semi-random.
What I CAN'T stand....
Is the "mirror image"....BS.
If this were true....
Either roots don't continue growing on say...Mugo after summer....BS.
Or if they do...
Our Mugos would suddenly backbud and begin growing after summer..BS.
And the best one!
When we chop our trees to a stump on top...
The roots will cut themselves too!
No, no it certainly is not a mirror image.
Sorce
Ryan makes it sound as if the only way to get dense, small ramification is to use Akadama.
repels root insects such as aphids & vine weevil grubs
Yeah the underlying science really isn't too important if you have proven results. Least in bonsai. I think I said right off the bat if its shown to work, that's great. But Ryan's style of lecturing heavily involves explaining the science or the underlying reason why something works. I think it's good and different from what other bonsai pros do. He has a background in horticulture so he does have some credibility. Even so it doesn't mean his word is gospel and must be taken at face value. I wasn't trying to make a big deal out of this but I said I was skeptical and got called out."Makes it sound" only because we are stuck feeling people have been "pushing" it on us.
But Ryan knows better than to make us want a product with high overhead and outrageous shipping cost, when he himself is finding an alternative....
Better to snag them monthly subscription costs!
Sure, I wish the education was perfectly real.....but the world ain't....
So...as with everything else..
Accept your personal % of how real it is....
And utilize the real information in application to your success.....
Fretting over the "exact science" of something we can, (with years of Japanese experience), see for ourselves is true to that personal % degree....(grain of salt)
Is a waste of time we can be using to further educate ourselves.
.............
One thing I know from observation.....
When I pull a tree out of a basket with DE....
I always wonder where the hell the roots are!
Too small to see!
I literally question how the tree was even growing!
So rather than fret over microns....
I accept what I can see...
More importantly....
What I can NOT see!
And just go with the only conclusion left!
There's a ton of fine feeder roots growing in that constantly soaked DE!
They say swamp trees have tight masses of fine roots. Apply %.
Observation. Observation. Observation.
Conscious in depth Multi questioning Obserfreakinvation!
Sorce
I post pics of earthworms in my DE to dispell this myth.
Dry DE may have this effect.
Wet DE does not!
That's another reverse placebo....
Can't go thinking you are safe safe.
Sorce
Sounds like this product has a better particle size than the NAPA 8822 & Optisorb. I'd like to try a bag if I can find a distributor with a reasonable shipping charge.Down To Earth
View attachment 175767
It’s almost entirely free of fines and has a decent distribution of particle sizes all lesser than 1/2 inch. I’m not sure if this distributor still sells it, but I believe this is from the big DE mine in Nevada.
perhaps your red wiggler is unharmed because it lacks an exoskeleton.
it can't be chance...
Earthworms aren't pernicious but I ask myself why you have them unless you have a proportion of organic matter in there too? My substrate is totally inorganic - there is nothing for them to consume so why would they occupy my bonsai pots?
Sorce, DE does kill insects / beetles, here's one study but there is a lot of evidence online if you look.
Sounds like this product has a better particle size than the NAPA 8822 & Optisorb. I'd like to try a bag if I can find a distributor with a reasonable shipping charge.
That's exactly right. If it were, your tree wouldn't be anywhere near as healthy and disease resistant.But no soil is Completely inorganic.