Fuck!This is awesome @Dr. Who. Could you do me a favor though and call Iron Fe and not Ir. Ir is Irridium, and I doubt people really want to add that to their soil.
I Fe el ya.Fuck!
Anyone know how to get Irridium out of soil...?
Interesting paper! Thanks for the pdf!My understanding is that Fe and Mn should be close. Ive had nice results with both at 100ppm. Pro's tell me that it's wise to bump up Mn just a little bit at a time like 10-20 ppm. I think approaches to leaching iron depend on pH. I dropped Fe ppm's in my 6.5 recycled peat based soil with gypsum.
The topic in the paper I attached discusses data similar to OP. In this example Mg and K are shown to antagonize potency while Mn and B support THC generation.
Re: Mn. AEA's product Accelerate packs a wallop of Mn without much NPK but with other seaweed and mineral inputs. I've used both Magnesium sulfate and Accelerate with good results. IMO dont even think about this type of action with out a soil test.
Woh.... hold up... Those are toxic levels of both Fe and Mn... 5ppm of Fe is on the high end and 0.5ppm of Mn is plenty. (those are actually the levels i use in mix #21) 2ppm of Mn is the highest I've seen in any recipe. 6.8ppm is the highest I've seen for Fe.My understanding is that Fe and Mn should be close. Ive had nice results with both at 100ppm. Pro's tell me that it's wise to bump up Mn just a little bit at a time like 10-20 ppm.
Lol No my friend, you're the joker ~10 ppm Fe toxic??? uh uh come againWoh.... hold up... Those are toxic levels of both Fe and Mn... 5ppm of Fe is on the high end and 0.5ppm of Mn is plenty. (those are actually the levels i use in mix #21) 2ppm of Mn is the highest I've seen in any recipe. 6.8ppm is the highest I've seen for Fe.
You can't be serious...
It would be best to blend this into your soils at build time.
The Cornell paper said: "Band application or foliar application of Mn fertilizer can eliminate Mn deficiency while broadcast application of Mn to soil is not cost effective and therefore not recommended"when plants were foliar sprayed with the ionic manganese the trichomes increased considerably.
The article I posted is an really an advertisement for some mineral foliar spray. Not sure why everybody is liking the paper.The Cornell paper said: "Band application or foliar application of Mn fertilizer can eliminate Mn deficiency while broadcast application of Mn to soil is not cost effective and therefore not recommended"
The Amazon ad you linked to said "Most Efficient When Applied as a Foliar Application".
I doubt anyone is reading the paper or liking it. Any response, at least on my part, is about the OP not the paper.Not sure why everybody is liking the paper.
My reply was in response to possibly using the wrong application method.It would be best to blend this into your soils at build time.
I doubt anyone is reading the paper or liking it. Any response, at least on my part, is about the OP not the paper.
I quoted you becasue you mentioned foliar .
I see no issue with foliar application. In 1976 I had five plants which were fertilized once a week with a foliar application of Miracle Grow. It worked very well.
My reply was in response to possibly using the wrong application method.
That would be most true for outdoor applications.I doubt anyone is reading the paper or liking it. Any response, at least on my part, is about the OP not the paper.
I quoted you becasue you mentioned foliar .
I see no issue with foliar application. In 1976 I had five plants which were fertilized once a week with a foliar application of Miracle Grow. It worked very well.
My reply was in response to possibly using the wrong application method.
REALLY?Not sure why everybody is liking the paper.
The idea that it one or another element is key or adding something extra will make more thc is ludicrous. Balance is key for life to thrive.
My understanding is that Fe and Mn should be close. Ive had nice results with both at 100ppm. Pro's tell me that it's wise to bump up Mn just a little bit at a time like 10-20 ppm. I think approaches to leaching iron depend on pH. I dropped Fe ppm's in my 6.5 recycled peat based soil with gypsum.
The topic in the paper I attached discusses data similar to OP. In this example Mg and K are shown to antagonize potency while Mn and B support THC generation.
Re: Mn. AEA's product Accelerate packs a wallop of Mn without much NPK but with other seaweed and mineral inputs. I've used both Magnesium sulfate and Accelerate with good results. IMO dont even think about this type of action with out a soil test.
No man. You took my quote out of context. I was referring to the paper I posted. The ad article for the snake oil. Not your link and the other one from Cornell.REALLY?
After being given a paper on the subject and backed up by another members posting of another paper that not only backs up the subject but that he has had success with? He even includes what he's used and had that success with.
What a single compound can do for plants should be noted by what leaving a single compound out would do.....
This post =
I saw that about the relationship between the Mn and the FE in arborist publications on amending outdoor soils for tree's with def's.
I should have posted something about that.
Yet the info you give is golden in that respect......Again, nice posting on that!
OK, OK - I gotcha! Yuppers I did!......Sorry......No man. You took my quote out of context. I was referring to the paper I posted. The ad article for the snake oil. Not your link and the other one from Cornell.
Your are correct. I did zero research and know nothing about how to apply Mn. I only looked at the content you posted, and wrote what was in the content regarding application. Then did a search for "band application" and posted the diagram from another Cornell document.I feel you did not research the application of Mn for plant use by supplementation enough.
Cool. Eat more trout and spinach, those have the highest natural Mn content. Fish or leafy greens is the basic answer.Your are correct. I did zero research and know nothing about how to apply Mn. I only looked at the content you posted, and wrote what was in the content regarding application. Then did a search for "band application" and posted the diagram from another Cornell document.
The key word was "possibly" when I said the method was "possibly incorrect" . I used "possibly" explicitly because I did not want to say you were wrong. The Cornell document in your post did not include blending or mixing.
I considered getting some of the Mn sulfate on Amazon as a food additive because I think my diet needs more Mn.