CaptainCAVEMAN
Well-Known Member
Good point riddle. pretty funny too.
Amen Brother!!!This is what is actually in molasses:
If you're noticing bigger buds, more thc, or a sweeter smell, you're just seeing what you want to see as there is not enough of anything in there to really make a difference either way.
- Calcium ----- .205%
- Iron -------- .0047%
Magnesium --- .242%
- Phosphorus -- .031%
- Potassium --- 1.464%
- Sodium ------ .037%
- Zinc -------- .0003%
- Copper ------ .0005%
- Manganese --- .0015%
- Selenium ---- .0178%
it does make a half decent micro nute supplement. zero leaf spots since its useplants start to consume simple sugars in the soil more during flowering, which deprives the microlife. adding molasses prevents this and keeps your beneficial bacteria fed & happy all the way through flowering. good stuff, but make sure it's unsulfured.
of course I'm speaking from an organic perspective here. and for the record, the amounts of calcium, magnesium, (commonly deficient) and potassium are not negligible, and can be the difference in healthy plants and not healthy ones. it makes a big difference.
plants start to consume simple sugars in the soil more during flowering, which deprives the microlife. adding molasses prevents this and keeps your beneficial bacteria fed & happy all the way through flowering. good stuff, but make sure it's unsulfured.
of course I'm speaking from an organic perspective here. and for the record, the amounts of calcium, magnesium, (commonly deficient) and potassium are not negligible, and can be the difference in healthy plants and not healthy ones. it makes a big difference.
is 1 tbsp per gal a cherry dosage when flushing with pure water?And yes I burned my plants adding a tbsp ger gallon in conjunction with my nutrient regiment. I dial it back to 1 tsp per gallon if not a little less, same results without the burn.
There is zero nitrogen in molasses, that's why it's not listed. In regards to the trace minerals, those are very trace amounts of micro nutrients, much less than are found in your average bottle of plant food.Also with the micro nutes in there, those are rational supplemental percentages with held against most nutrients. Especially for 4 bucks a bottle. You also forgot to mention that blackstrap molasses (which is the only kind that is recommended to use) has a significant presence of nitrogen. I don't know why that isn't in the percentage analysis up there. Between the waste from the microbes digesting the carbs in there, the micro nutes, the K and IMO especially the N (which is usually over looking in the flowering stage) molasses is a fantastic cheap, and readily available supplemental nutrient for soil grows.
Got a link to support this statement?That is why so many companies (schultz as an example) use molasses as their base for their fertilizers.
but my lips hurt real bad!There is zero nitrogen in molasses, that's why it's not listed. In regards to the trace minerals, those are very trace amounts of micro nutrients, much less than are found in your average bottle of plant food.
Got a link to support this statement?