Any of you grow camomile with the girls

Kingrow1

Well-Known Member
They need time to establish so nice long veg n the endomycorrhizal needs carbs n is apparently best suited for cannabis
Glomus intradices and glomus mosseae are the main two for cannabis and a lot of other green plants, they will be the top two on a lot of products even a few i own. These should also be present in most soils and colonize roots reasonably quickly so as to out compete all other fungis and bacterias.

I could get great results just using either or both and intradices especially but both come with slight compromises on soil fauna and plant growth.

Beneis and mycos are real simple, the weed marketing over complicates and over prices...
 

theslipperbandit

Well-Known Member
Dude it's thanks to mycorrhizal we've plants on land lol those curious tentacles help gain access to minerals the plant otherwise may not have gained.
I'm certain the endomycorrhizal isn't a myth, it's used in industrial farming on harsh lands and recently alot of research has gone into it, infact some 80% of the world's plants have a symbiotic relationship with the stuff, I'm not mocking bennies they play a different roll they break down the compounds to soluble form that's why I use chemical nutes, so skip the bennies but keep me carbs for the endo but I'd be a fool to assume I have no bennies what so ever but saying that this is my 6/7 run with the same soil feeding every dose in accordance to what the leafs say but next run ,I'll add a little canna terra every so often to mix in with the soil I recycle just a dash,she's phed at 6.2 so keeps my regulated and cannazyme for the roots left over then some macro nutes,coffee rusk (less next time as id some clawing) and some endo...temped to get some worms in there but meh it still works
 

Huckster79

Well-Known Member
Well camomile seems very unquestioned to be benefitial to nearby plants outside our world. Heres what im thinking, roman camomile gets to 18", my plants are usually blanked out that low so foliage wouldnt be tangled.

Im not worried about them eating too many nutes as they are noted light feeders and i bet that we usually have more nutes in our mediums than plants can use.

I may try it on one girl and see what happens, if its detrimental its one harmed girl...im a hobbyist not a commercial man...
 

Xcoregamerskillz

Well-Known Member
Well camomile seems very unquestioned to be benefitial to nearby plants outside our world. Heres what im thinking, roman camomile gets to 18", my plants are usually blanked out that low so foliage wouldnt be tangled.

Im not worried about them eating too many nutes as they are noted light feeders and i bet that we usually have more nutes in our mediums than plants can use.

I may try it on one girl and see what happens, if its detrimental its one harmed girl...im a hobbyist not a commercial man...
Yep. No reason not to try it. If you do it with clones you'll get a better comparison.
 

Kingrow1

Well-Known Member
Dude it's thanks to mycorrhizal we've plants on land lol those curious tentacles help gain access to minerals the plant otherwise may not have gained.
I'm certain the endomycorrhizal isn't a myth, it's used in industrial farming on harsh lands and recently alot of research has gone into it, infact some 80% of the world's plants have a symbiotic relationship with the stuff, I'm not mocking bennies they play a different roll they break down the compounds to soluble form that's why I use chemical nutes, so skip the bennies but keep me carbs for the endo but I'd be a fool to assume I have no bennies what so ever but saying that this is my 6/7 run with the same soil feeding every dose in accordance to what the leafs say but next run ,I'll add a little canna terra every so often to mix in with the soil I recycle just a dash,she's phed at 6.2 so keeps my regulated and cannazyme for the roots left over then some macro nutes,coffee rusk (less next time as id some clawing) and some endo...temped to get some worms in there but meh it still works
The two Glomus fungi's I listed are endomycorrhizal and are the main two you should start with. Symbiosis with plants is not truly mutual, deprive the soil of nutrients and the fungi will deprive your plants of nutrients and stuff, again its a massive subject.
 

Kingrow1

Well-Known Member
Well camomile seems very unquestioned to be benefitial to nearby plants outside our world. Heres what im thinking, roman camomile gets to 18", my plants are usually blanked out that low so foliage wouldnt be tangled.

Im not worried about them eating too many nutes as they are noted light feeders and i bet that we usually have more nutes in our mediums than plants can use.

I may try it on one girl and see what happens, if its detrimental its one harmed girl...im a hobbyist not a commercial man...
Ive tried camonmile and it does nothing...
 

Kingrow1

Well-Known Member
Did you ever try mint?

Yea the theory may not translate to cannabis... though the idea of having some fresh mint, cannabis chamomile tea sounds a bit tempting in and of itself ;)
I thought you meant chamonmiles other properties not companion planting it.

Give up on that idea, its problematic and will be a lot of work for little gain, or pioneer it and make a thread with results in a couple weeks.

Indoors its hard to find compatiable plants to grow in the same pot as weed but herbs, garlic, onion plants in he grow room will deter pests a little :-)
 

Huckster79

Well-Known Member
Im gunna ,play with it for fun of it, being a hobbyist gives you freedom if it all goes to hell its no big deal, which would not be so for a commercial guy... i can tell odds are against the venture, im glad i know that though...
 
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