del66666
Well-Known Member
holland and barret health food shop sell organic blackstrap molasses.Yeah I've got unsulpherated. So is it OK to use in the next watering?
holland and barret health food shop sell organic blackstrap molasses.Yeah I've got unsulpherated. So is it OK to use in the next watering?
Whats Marmite? Never heard of it. Molasses, natmoon swears by it if you have seen any of his threads. He had some 36" colas off one plant, using molasses and a air basket with a fish air pump running into a spounge in bottom of basket!That's the thing about molasses, some people swear by it and others wont go near it. That's why I'm so lost on the subject. It's like marmite!!..you either love it or you hate it.
Well - there you have it, proof positive that molasses doesn't work on Uranus! Maybe if you actually try it, you'll see that it really does work - at least here on Earth!It's been well established that the rate of carbon uptake through the roots to the new shoots is quite low in plants, on the order of 0.6%.
https://www.uni-hohenheim.de/~kuzyakov/K_SBB_2006_Glucose-Uptake-Maize.pdf
Almost all of the sugar will be consumed by bacteria in the soil. This bacteria then competes with the plant for resources causing nutrient lock up. Furthermore, the sugar will throw off the osmotic pressure in the root zone which also makes nutrient uptake more difficult.
Sorry to repremand you, but you really need to do some research on BENEFICIAL bacteria and fungi. Increase in yield 10-20%.Isn't Molasses just Carbs (i.e. sugars)?
Your plant isn't going to be able to take that in so I don't see how it could improve yeilds. In fact it would work great as food for mould and fungi which would be a BAD thing.
I wouldn't do it personally.
No, pure molasses, huge difference.4 real? u put pancake surup on your plants?
Grow the fuck up.....Well - there you have it, proof positive that molasses doesn't work on Uranus! Maybe if you actually try it, you'll see that it really does work - at least here on Earth!
Yes, but we want to use the scientific method (look it up) in our experiments so that we have empiricism rather than anecdotes or so that we are playing a bunch of guessing games. Claims are worthless without evidence to back them up. A lot of people have tried the power of prayer, for example, and most claim it works. Does it?Dude chill out! I mean I'm all for using theory to guide you, but when it comes right down to it, experiment tells you what's really true in a given situation. I mean there's a thousand ways your idea for why molasses is bad could be off. Maybe the particular bacteria molasses promotes acts primarily by consuming other bacteria that causes nute lock up, maybe the bacteria excrete beneficial nutes, maybe the change in osmotic pressure is negligible, who knows how it works? The point is lots of people have tried it and claim it works. Don't be so sure of yourself until you've repeated the experiment yourself!
So what your saying is your full of shit?Yes, but we want to use the scientific method (look it up) in our experiments so that we have empiricism rather than anecdotes or so that we are playing a bunch of guessing games. Claims are worthless without evidence to back them up. A lot of people have tried the power of prayer, for example, and most claim it works. Does it?
My signature basically means that if you don't have the evidence to back up what you're saying then it's BS. There are a lot of claims on this forum that are without merit.
You're appealing to negative proof which is a naive and foolish logical fallacy. I'm not trying to be a dick, but it's hard not to be a smartass.So what your saying is your full of shit?
Cause scientific method starts with research. Then you form a hypothesis, "BS", then you test your hypothesis to create evidence to support your claim with an experiment.
So since you haven't tried it, your signature says it all.
Not trying to be a dick, but it's hard not to be a smartass
Please, try what you want. I'm not trying to start a pissing match but you need to understand that "anecdotal evidence" is an oxymoron.Fair enough, I agree anecdotal evidence is not a good basis for making conclusions. Generally a well controlled study presented in a peer-reviewed journal is accepted as satisfactory evidence. Unfortunately, growing weed being the federal offense it is, asking for that kind of evidence is simply impractical. (And of course this is the same reason why the AMA can still claim that there is no therapeutic use for cannabis, but that's an issue for another thread). However, given that there is plenty of anecdotal evidence, I would argue that there is plenty of motivation for me to try this in my next grow. So in summary, you are perfectly entitled to not believe the claim that molasses is helpful. I, myself am more convinced by the anecdotal evidence from growers than by predictions (based in good science) on such a complex biological system.