Sunday 13 November 2011

Our Product Trials

We have been privileged to be able to gain the support of some of the leading scientist in a variety of fields but our primary champion is Dr. Simon Shackley from the UKBRC at Edinburgh University. He is a specialist in social and environmental sustainability and carbon management, he is also a member of the Scottish Carbon Capture and Storage Centre. Along with others from the UKBRC, he is also responsible for the literature referred to by DEFRA in regards to biochar and has been incredibly supportive and vital in us getting our concept and product to market.

With our first product enrichar+, we have tried to incorporate some of the old recognisable materials used within the garden(worm cast, seaweed), with some of the new innovative growing materials now on the market, to produce a product that is recognisable to the gardener but incorporates the new scientific innovation as well.
Each box of enrichar+ contains:
We've kept the fungi and the seaweed separate from the biochar/worm cast mix, for a couple of reasons.
  1. Some of the mycorrhizae need to be in contact with the roots to be able to survive, so to blend the mycorrhizal into the mix and hope the root system grows quickly enough so they make contact with the fungi, is a hit and miss affair and certainly not the best use of this product.
    By giving a separate sachet, the consumer has far more control of when to use, with what plants(not all plants benefit from mycorrhizal) and by how much.
  2. Plants need food in different ratio's, so to give the consumer the ability to feed when the plant needs it rather than throwing it all in at once, is a far better use of this product also. After all, you could end up feeding the weeds?
  3. But the most obvious reason for us, is so that you the consumer, have control over your product and can actually see and touch the products that you are supposedly buying.

Our Pot Trials

Gardeners around the world have known the wonders of worm cast and seaweed for millennia.  So, adding biochar to worm cast whilst using seaweed fertiliser and mycorrhizal (fungus) should help you grow some magnificent triffids or at the very least some extra vegetables.

Trials done at the UKBRC, Edinburgh University.



These are the trials that gave us the ratio of biochar to use that is suitable for maximum benefit and also threw up some further research as too much biochar can cause a mutation in the root system(certainly in broad beans anyway).





 OK, so we’re not growing triffids yet, but we have had some fantastic pot trials.  Our pictures speak a thousand words.

Trials done at the UKBRC, Edinburgh University


These trials are ongoing but have already shown a significant difference from the use of mycorrhizal added to enrichar+ mix. As these trials progress we will upload more pictures and details





Please remember that these are not the only benefits from enrichar+, for every box of enrichar+ bought, we will plant 3 meters of native hedgerow as a natural habitat but also creating employment in the future. For more information click here

Friday 11 November 2011

It's Time To Take Control

I'm not after a revolution (as such),

I don't even want a fight (well...?)

What i do want is communities to stop being robbed of their resources!!!

I'm sick of being lied to about there being no value in recycling or there's no money in wind turbines, incinerators are clean technology, we have to have a unit that burns 200,000 tons.
It's just a joke the rubbish we've been fed over the years (pardon the pun).

What we will tell you will make your blood boil, the money these businesses are making is obscene when many of us are struggling. It's all wrong and we're intent on changing it.

We are going to offer society a choice for their environmental management needs:
  • Have a private company deal with their needs and have their resources used for private gain, which will certainly cost them in the long run.
  • Or have Clear Sky Communities deal with their needs and have their resources used for community gain, benefiting them directly both now and in the future.
We will question whether the 3 R's are relevant in a modern society where waste is a resource, not a 'WASTE'?
We will challenge restrictive legislation and it's enforcers and hold them to account.
We will utilise all resources to the best of our ability whilst considering the environmental impact that this may have?
We will talk about how we will be able to reduce energy bills in the future, not increase them as we re being told is going to happen if we continue down the route we're on!

But above all, we will take control of our environmental future.


Our Resource, Our Environment, Our Future.

And so it begins.