sst help I guess

Pattahabi

Well-Known Member
Organic gmo thats fucked up lol.
I look for the non-gmo logo especially on Kashi cereals. :cry:

Is there any certain enzymes proteins etc we want more then others
The ones that are listed for a soil's health is what I would look for. I'm especially found of chitinase. ;)

Those are awesome! I grew out some royal purple snap beans this year. I'm such a noob bean grower. I was totally disappointed when they turned green upon cooking! lol!

P-
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
Lol, tomato, tomoto...

I've been trying to use enzyme tea as of late because of the malted barley grain teas. ;)
hahaha, yeah, you got my joke... So have we all concluded which seeds are the best to use? I've only used the sunflower seeds, and I was getting ready to get some more seeds, but was thinking maybe a smaller seed would be better? more sprouts= more enzymes? or would a larger seed have more enzymes, and that's not even opening the can of worms as to which enzymes are present in which seeds...
 

Pattahabi

Well-Known Member
hahaha, yeah, you got my joke... So have we all concluded which seeds are the best to use? I've only used the sunflower seeds, and I was getting ready to get some more seeds, but was thinking maybe a smaller seed would be better? more sprouts= more enzymes? or would a larger seed have more enzymes, and that's not even opening the can of worms as to which enzymes are present in which seeds...
Grease, I've been trying to track down that information. I haven't had a lot of luck other then the studies done on malted grains. Thank goodness for the beer industry!

I do tend to use a little more sunflower seeds, and a few less barley and wheat seeds, but I don't know if I can really see a specific difference? The one seed I am careful with is alfalfa as it tends to have a more pronounced response.

Is it bong thirty yet?

bongsmilie

P-
 

anzohaze

Well-Known Member
Grease, I've been trying to track down that information. I haven't had a lot of luck other then the studies done on malted grains. Thank goodness for the beer industry!

I do tend to use a little more sunflower seeds, and a few less barley and wheat seeds, but I don't know if I can really see a specific difference? The one seed I am careful with is alfalfa as it tends to have a more pronounced response.

Is it bong thirty yet?

bongsmilie

P-
did you ever happened to come to a conclusion mr.
 

Sunny Organics

Well-Known Member
hahaha, yeah, you got my joke... So have we all concluded which seeds are the best to use? I've only used the sunflower seeds, and I was getting ready to get some more seeds, but was thinking maybe a smaller seed would be better? more sprouts= more enzymes? or would a larger seed have more enzymes, and that's not even opening the can of worms as to which enzymes are present in which seeds...
i use wheatgrass seeds, they grow weird ass looking roots. they get the job done for sure, i add coconut water as well straight from fresh coconuts from tijuana haha.
 

MistaRasta

Well-Known Member
hahaha, yeah, you got my joke... So have we all concluded which seeds are the best to use? I've only used the sunflower seeds, and I was getting ready to get some more seeds, but was thinking maybe a smaller seed would be better? more sprouts= more enzymes? or would a larger seed have more enzymes, and that's not even opening the can of worms as to which enzymes are present in which seeds...

You can expiriment but nothing compares to malted barley.

I find using malted barley is the best thing to use. You can get it at the brew store very cheap, I get mine for 1$ a pound. Some of the important enzymes found in it are Amylase, Arylsulphatase, B-glucosidase, cellulase, chitinase, dehydrogenase,phosphatase, protease, and urease.

Being as smart as you are, I'm sure you can figure a good amount of these enzymes roles and how important they are for soil health right off the top of your head... Malted barley is so much easier than seed sprout teas as you literally grind it up and brew it or top dress if you'd like. No 3 day sprout session.. And it was sprouted to get the perfect enzyme levels, probably not going to be comparable without 10,000$ worth of equipment to sprout with tbh..

Fungi, bacteria, and worms LOVE this stuff. It's super sustainable and an amazing 'bloom booster' ;)
 

Grandpa GreenJeans

Well-Known Member
You can expiriment but nothing compares to malted barley.

I find using malted barley is the best thing to use. You can get it at the brew store very cheap, I get mine for 1$ a pound. Some of the important enzymes found in it are Amylase, Arylsulphatase, B-glucosidase, cellulase, chitinase, dehydrogenase,phosphatase, protease, and urease.

Being as smart as you are, I'm sure you can figure a good amount of these enzymes roles and how important they are for soil health right off the top of your head... Malted barley is so much easier than seed sprout teas as you literally grind it up and brew it or top dress if you'd like. No 3 day sprout session.. And it was sprouted to get the perfect enzyme levels, probably not going to be comparable without 10,000$ worth of equipment to sprout with tbh..

Fungi, bacteria, and worms LOVE this stuff. It's super sustainable and an amazing 'bloom booster' ;)
I like your method. What are the measurements for boiling. I'd be adding it to the vortex btw.
 

Kind Sir

Well-Known Member
I can't help you here, I use the regular method of just soaking overnight and then rinsing and then soaking in an aerated bucket till they pop.
free bump though, I still say we need a sticky for the SSTs.
good luck
You should make a SST,Foliar thread bro. Id appreciate it! I feel ppl will follow/accept your thread.
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
You should make a SST,Foliar thread bro. Id appreciate it! I feel ppl will follow/accept your thread.
you know i'd love to, but honestly my expertise is in different areas, if we can find @Pattahabi, he's probably the guy that knows the most on the subject.
I've only done maybe, hmm, six or maybe seven ssts.. actually i think its six, I think, it was a lot of effort, I have been doing the "lazy" route, which is the pure coconut water, that's essentially the same, if I understand it correctly.
My areas lie more in the water-only, leaf-compost based mix recipes.
I think I have Pats email address somewhere, let me see if I can get him out of his pot-infested bear-cave
 
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