Sugar water and honey feed

slumper707

Active Member
It is NOT a good cheap Ca source to make anything!

I don't understand where these idea's come from.....The amounts of minerals found in molasses are so low that once you put your tsp to TBL of molasses to a gallon of water....The amounts available TO the plant are so low that they have no measurable effect to plant growth!. They are trace amounts at best! In all reality, N would be the most available in the pure molasses form (right out of the bottle) at 0.40 average % by volume.......Now how low do you think that becomes in your feed concentration by using even 1 TBL of molasses in a gallon of feed mix? Keep in mind the amounts by volume percentage of the other things like Ca, P, K, Ir, S, etc, etc are well lower then the N value!

Are you seeing the truth yet!

But of course, If it makes you feel good - use it !!!!!
It's sure not hurting anything!
As a colloid, milk consists of several substances, including water, vitamin rich protein fat and sugar, but they are in suspended form. The nitrogen in milk is bound-up in protein, and bacteria and fungi in the soil will break this down. When you boil milk, the fat and the protein separate. Some of the nitrogen will be released as nitrate. This is what forms as the cream film at the top of pot when you boil it. You then scoop the film of the top and mix it with fresh good ph water re simmer and then let the mixture cool back down before feeding. The nitrogen-containing ions in what you have just produced can then be taken into the plant roots for growth. I just added a lil extra sugar to give the molecules a kick start.
 

Resinhound

Well-Known Member
As a colloid, milk consists of several substances, including water, vitamin rich protein fat and sugar, but they are in suspended form. The nitrogen in milk is bound-up in protein, and bacteria and fungi in the soil will break this down. When you boil milk, the fat and the protein separate. Some of the nitrogen will be released as nitrate. This is what forms as the cream film at the top of pot when you boil it. You then scoop the film of the top and mix it with fresh good ph water re simmer and then let the mixture cool back down before feeding. The nitrogen-containing ions in what you have just produced can then be taken into the plant roots for growth. I just added a lil extra sugar to give the molecules a kick start.
Are you daft? Who said anything about milk??

Molasses was the compound in question... And you come back with some Bullshit about milk??

Trollololol...


Yep threads pretty much a joke... With PetFlora pushing $30 a quart $2 Costco honey and you "doubling your trichomes" this thread is definitely an RIU all star.

Somebody call the motherfuckin #riuhistorian..
 

PetFlora

Well-Known Member
So you are equating the flat/round earth debate that took place 500 hundred years ago with the notion that buying a $30 bottle of shit called HoneyChome is somehow going to change the face of modern horticulture as we know it? And with today's knowledge of botany we don't really know what happens when you pour honey on your roots?.. Really?

Honestly this thread just keeps getting dumber and dumber.

Truly just...


LOL

and still, you've never tried it, but, there you go making ignorant assumptions based on what? IGNORANCE
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
Are you daft? Who said anything about milk??

Molasses was the compound in question... And you come back with some Bullshit about milk??

Trollololol...


Yep threads pretty much a joke... With PetFlora pushing $30 a quart $2 Costco honey and you "doubling your trichomes" this thread is definitely an RIU all star.

Somebody call the motherfuckin #riuhistorian..
AW come on! It's the biblical "Land of Milk and Honey" thing!

I hear if you pour that on Israelis, they grow taller, plus smell and taste better!
(At least the women. Can't speak for the men, personally. There is some rumor of it working on Egyptians too but, I can't speak for that one!)

Pour it on Palestinians and all you do is piss them off and the kids throw rocks at you till a Hezbollah soldier gives one a Molotov cocktail and you pull out a gun.......shit, you know how it goes from here!
 
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slumper707

Active Member
Are you daft? Who said anything about milk??

Molasses was the compound in question... And you come back with some Bullshit about milk??

Trollololol...


Yep threads pretty much a joke... With PetFlora pushing $30 a quart $2 Costco honey and you "doubling your trichomes" this thread is definitely an RIU all star.

Somebody call the motherfuckin #riuhistorian..
Lol
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
It is NOT a good cheap Ca source to make anything!

I don't understand where these idea's come from.....The amounts of minerals found in molasses are so low that once you put your tsp to TBL of molasses to a gallon of water....The amounts available TO the plant are so low that they have no measurable effect to plant growth!. They are trace amounts at best! In all reality, N would be the most available in the pure molasses form (right out of the bottle) at 0.40 average % by volume.......Now how low do you think that becomes in your feed concentration by using even 1 TBL of molasses in a gallon of feed mix? Keep in mind the amounts by volume percentage of the other things like Ca, P, K, Ir, S, etc, etc are well lower then the N value!

Are you seeing the truth yet!

But of course, If it makes you feel good - use it !!!!!
It's sure not hurting anything!
I see what you're saying and maybe you're right. I use more than a TBLSP so my truth is that I like to do it and getting around a pound and three quarters off of 820 watts of lights makes me not want to fix what's not broken. Makes me feel good.

Keep up the good science. I remember being all into trace elements and ppm's very frantically as I first came here looking for info. I have found my stride in maxsea, epsom salts and molasses in dirt for some time now.
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
I see what you're saying and maybe you're right. I use more than a TBLSP so my truth is that I like to do it and getting around a pound and three quarters off of 820 watts of lights makes me not want to fix what's not broken. Makes me feel good.

Keep up the good science. I remember being all into trace elements and ppm's very frantically as I first came here looking for info. I have found my stride in maxsea, epsom salts and molasses in dirt for some time now.
To each his own.
It ain't the molasses making that yield. ( I don't believe GPW has any connection to growing ability )
How are you adding the Epsom ?
 
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