Not exactly, as rhizome says on the 1st page, Have a look @ a GH product called " SubCulture".
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Not exactly, as rhizome says on the 1st page, Have a look @ a GH product called " SubCulture".
I think rhizome is suggesting you don't have to apply nearly as often as the directions call for. I think you would still have to do it ocassionally. What is ocassionally? Anyone, rhizome?Quote:
Originally Posted by Tea Party
From what I have known and learned here it is a one time application to be mixed into the soil. It will take care of itself after that. Dr. Bloor
That's what I figured. There is a powdered bag for sale at the local grow shop and the directions are for 1/4 teaspoon per gallon of water, but it does not say how often to apply.Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr. Bloor
I guess I was thinking more about hydro, where you change your nutrients often. I imagine it would be much less often for soil.
i just bought some mycorrhizal tablets
heres the explination on the box
give back to your garden what the forests and jungles have naturally
improves
-plant growth
-nutrient and water uptake
-fruit and vegetable yield
-flower and tree growth
-leaf size, color and density
reduces
-transplant shock
-drought stress
directions for use
-direct sowing, place tablet 1" from the seed/clone beneath the soil surface
-transplanting, place tablets at the bottom of the planting
guaranteed analysis 17-9-5
also contains mycorrhiza in calcined clay 45%
humic acid derived from leonardite(cdfa method)35%
ascophyllum nodosum(seaweed extract)20%
MYCORRHIZA APPROXIMATELY 10,000,050 VIABLE ORGANISMS PER GRAM
ECTO
pisolithus tinctorius-9,000,000 spores per gram
rhizopogon luteolus-250,000 spores per gram
rhizopogon fulvigleba-250,000 spores per gram
rhizopogon villosuli-250,000 spores per gram
rhizopogon amylopogon-250,000 spores per gram
ENDO
glomus intaradices-20 spores per gram
glomus clarum-5 spores per gram
glomus mosseae-5 spores per gram
glomus monosporus-5 spores per gram
glomus deserticola-5 spores per gram
glomus brasillianum-5 spores per gram
gigaspora margarita-5 spores per gram
Heh- I thought the endo class was limited to glomus, non-inclusively.
OP- GH's logic in replacing culture w/ res change is that there are interactions between micro-organisms that can influence plant growth/health, beyond any primary affect each organism may have. You're resetting your population ratios w/ reapplication.
See incredibly long pdf file here I think that you'll need to click the manual download link.
On the flip side, endo populations in particular tend to perpetuate.
I couldn't speak for population ratios in the final product, but you can grow out Subculture at home- Room temp water (gassed out), 5% grow nute, a little bit of glucose ( or whatever ya got handy), toss in a pinch of Sub, leave it in the dark a couple days- It'll breed.
Yer on yer own for dosage.
Do not kick over- stinks pretty good.
I'm using Happy Frog for my big girls with awesome results, I'm even using it for my other plants, and they seem to be in heaven, the stuff is primo
also....in my plant physiology class we learned about mychorrhizal fungi (actually the one you guys are referring to is most likely Endomichorrhizae or Arbuscular michorrhizae, they are highly branched arbuscles within root cortical cells, and apparently neither the cell wall or the host's cell membrane is breached (when the fungus enters the root tips, and the nodule structure is formed transferring nutrients between the fungi and the root cortical cell) I think mainly the only thing the nodules do is provide an ''extra" nitrogen source that the plant stores in nodules in its roots...but I've never seen this in cannabis
I used to grow peas and beans (string beans) and always used an inocculant, specifically to fix nitrogen nodules to the roots. Was always afraid of fixing the nitrogen to the cannabis roots, (if indeed it would react the same way) because the nitrogen would still be there while trying to flower.
Is this the same kind/type of product?
I Know this thread has been dead for awhile, but i would like to pass on something i learned in class this week about mycorrhiza fungi. First off if your grow isnt 120% organic its just a waste of money to try and use the fungi. Any ferts that use salts will kill the fungi in a hurry. The fungi also can increase the surface area for the roots up 200%. But this is only really helpful if the roots arent already taking up all the space in the pots. Also the fungi have the ability to inorganic or inaccessable nutes, and convert them to the plant. Last but not least fungi breathe O2 and give off CO2. Kinda nifty I thought, and very symbotic. Sooooo in closing grow your plants in larger pots or outside with mycorrhiza, you will have to feed and water your plant alot less.
Heres a site that specialize in all sorts of fungi. Fungi Perfecti®: gourmet and medicinal mushrooms.
and paul Stamets on ted kewl shit Paul Stamets on 6 ways mushrooms can save the world | Video on TED.com
ps. i bought the potting soil and rooting meduim with the extra nitrigon fixing bacteria. It is amazing i had to cut my blood meal doage in half. I was already using half the recommend amount.
Viperman