superthrive

nickfury510

Well-Known Member
2 drops, .4 / 1 cap full PER GALLON-- that is a wide range???! how much/how often should this be used?

I love ankles.
you can use it everyday as vitamins or once a week for stress reduction...just dont go over 1/4tsp per gallon if you are doing it everyday
 

my7k

Active Member
Oh superthrive is divided into veg and flowering mixes?

Is it really just b vitamins? Do you know what form(s)? Would I do just as well sharing mine from GNC with them?

Also, is the N-P-K breakdown applicable?
 

nickfury510

Well-Known Member
Oh superthrive is divided into veg and flowering mixes?

Is it really just b vitamins? Do you know what form(s)? Would I do just as well sharing mine from GNC with them?

Also, is the N-P-K breakdown applicable?
no mixes..just one bottle of hormones and vitamins used everyday or every week or whenever for sstress and vitamins..no npk:joint:
 

daniel9guitar

Active Member
I just bought a bottle of superthrive. I have a 400watt HPS/MH switchable ballast and its my first go at indoors. I have a plant well into the flowering stage, under a 400wattHPS bulb, its day 42 but I want it bigger so I bought this stuff. I dont want to fck it up tho so I used a little (1ml/4litres) on my younger ones and I will see how they go and if all is good I will introduce it to my hairy female. Has anyone used this and gotten better results than normal? I'm sick of paying 250 bucks for an ounce every week. Cheers..From Australia!!
 

panhead

Well-Known Member
Super thrive has been exposed as snake oil,it has not shown any evidence at all in clinical trials to do anything to promote root growth,make healthier plants or to lesson the shock of transplant,your better off using that $10 on good fertilizer because super thrive will not do one single thing to make your plants healthier.

From the University of California about Superthrive.

" Does vitamin B1 help transplants take root?
From: Sunset | Date: May 1, 1992| Author: Swezey, Lauren Bonar | COPYRIGHT 1992 Sunset Publishing Corp.

FOR MORE THAN 50 years, vitamin B1 (thiamine hydrochloride) has been touted as a cure-all for transplant shock. Labels typically claim that B1 aids rooting and growth of a wide range of plants.

But University of California research on vegetables failed to prove that B1 reduces transplant shock or stimulates root development. Researchers found "no discernible differences in color or vigor among treatments" when B1 and B1 plus iron, manganese, and zinc were used on peppers, pole beans, squash, sweet corn, "
 
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