ÒÒlegilizeitÒÒ
Well-Known Member
molasses can be used the entire time but stopping like a week before harvest isnt a bad idea. if you add to much molasses your soil will start to stink
Sugar isn't the main purpose for unsulphured blackstrap molasses. It feeds your soil and is a chelating agent that makes it easier for the nutrients to reach your plant. Why everyone ignores this fact is beyond my ken.I'd rather Juice an organic granny smith apple and dilute it in a gallon of water.
marijuana is a complex plant, apple is a complex sugar.
molasses is a simple sugar.
sig·nif·i·cant - Adjective - /sigˈnifikənt/Can you define 'significant'? I ask because the water out of my tap contains more calcium and magnesium than your standard 'dose' of molasses.
It also feeds the organisms in a tea brew. But it gets old and redundant trying to explain to everybody how you use molasses and why exactly, and apparently it's usually quite pointless to do so.Sugar isn't the main purpose for unsulphured blackstrap molasses. It feeds your soil and is a chelating agent that makes it easier for the nutrients to reach your plant. Why everyone ignores this fact is beyond my ken.
Thanks for clarifying. My point to those that use molasses and think that it provides any measurable positive difference is that when you look at molasses like you'd look at a Guaranteed Analysis label, you realize how insignificant the mineral make-up is compared to the alternatives. Composting egg shells, banana peels, using Epsom salt in your soil mix will all provide more benefit to your soil and plants. Stimulating microbial life can easily be accomplished with any sugar source since half of molasses is just that (..and 75% of a dose is just carbohydrate).sig·nif·i·cant - Adjective - /sigˈnifikənt/
1. Sufficiently great or important to be worthy of attention; noteworthy.
2. Having a particular meaning; indicative of something.
Calcium and magnesium are just two minerals. Blackstrap, depending on the brand, may have up to 200 mg of calcium per tablespoon. So if you were to add molasses to your tap water, it would contain even more calcium and magnesium ! There's also iron, manganese, copper and a bit of zinc. The potassium content is of more significance (that's a noun), with up to or greater than 600 mg per tablespoon or 3 to 6%. The amount of phosphorous, in contrast, is quite insignificant (that means not at all significant\noteworthy).
It also feeds the organisms in a tea brew. But it gets old and redundant trying to explain to everybody how you use molasses and why exactly, and apparently it's usually quite pointless to do so.
Why would someone use blackstrap molasses in teas or soil if they didn't think it might have some benefit... to plants and soil? Have you brewed compost or guano tea, at all or using molasses?Thanks for clarifying. My point to those that use molasses and think that it provides any measurable positive difference is that when you look at molasses like you'd look at a Guaranteed Analysis label, you realize how insignificant the mineral make-up is compared to the alternatives. Composting egg shells, banana peels, using Epsom salt in your soil mix will all provide more benefit to your soil and plants. Stimulating microbial life can easily be accomplished with any sugar source since half of molasses is just that (..and 75% of a dose is just carbohydrate).
Another thing molasses users look past is the potential for putting too much carbohydrate into the soil. Doing so will stimulate bacteria and fungal growth so much so that the soil becomes anaerobic. This is because many bacteria and all fungi require oxygen. Too much soil microbial respiration and the soil oxygen levels are too low for the roots, which is not good for the plant.
People use all kinds of products without actually knowing why or how or if they even work.Why would someone use blackstrap molasses in teas or soil if they didn't think it might have some benefit... to plants and soil?
I have multiple compost bins for my outdoor veggie garden, liquid and solid. I've added molasses, I've added sugar solutions, I've skipped both altogether. My compost seems to perform exactly the same year-after-year regardless of whether it was doctored with carbs.Have you brewed compost or guano tea, at all or using molasses?
Do you think anyone with an opposing view to yourself is arguing? If you don't enjoy an exchange of ideas, maybe you're not cut out for these internet forums.It just seems an awfully lot like you'd just like to argue, for the sake of arguing about it.
75% carbohydrate is what Grandma's contains and that product is about average (http://nutritiondata.self.com/facts/sweets/5573/2). My 190ppm tap water contains more calcium and magnesium than even the most 'nutrient dense' brands of blackstrap molasses. I'm not bragging, I'm just trying to put the mineral content in perspective and considering my water costs about one penny for a gallon, that's certainly compelling. Sure, the potassium content is noteworthy but so is the potassium content of the compost bin of a good composter.How'd you make your 75% carbohydrate determination... pick up a random bottle of molasses at the grocer and check the nutrition facts on the back? Blackstrap is the kind you'd want to be using in the garden. It has double the mineral\potassium content of 2nd molasses, and less sugar. Blackstrap is about 42% sugar, 60% carbohydrates. Not all the carbohydrates in it are simple sugar, or sucrose, there are polysaccharides as well, so it really has it's own unique carb profile.
ok heres a legit reason against molasses especially blackstrap molasses.... it stains everything especially carpet. and its not the best for shakey people. or people with bad hand pain or arthiritis.Just stating my opinion. I think Sucanat is way better for a number of reasons. Perhaps I'm just a messy person, but occasionally a little molasses would drip onto the floor or whatever and it can be a sticky mess to clean up. Sucanat is dry so it can be vacuumed up if spilled. No staining, no sticky mess. I have nothing against molasses. I just prefer sucanat to it these days.
No shit?People use all kinds of products without actually knowing why or how or if they even work.
I do an actively aerated liquid compost outside, 30 days and that plant-based material is true liquid compost.I am not sure we're having the same conversation here anyways, I never asked you about your outdoor compost bins... actively aerated compost tea.
Again, there are lower cost alternatives that don't put so much sugar and carbohydrate into your soil at each use.http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=nutrientprofile&dbid=85
That listing if you do the math works out to about 500 mg per 20 g. Plantation Blackstrap has twice the amount of K than the nutrition data listing (which isn't for blackstrap). Just trying to put things in perspective.
For some reason it doesn't seem like 'liquid compost' and 'actively aerated compost tea' would be considered very similar things. Though it sounds like you could brew an AACT with the liquid compost.I do an actively aerated liquid compost outside, 30 days and that plant-based material is true liquid compost.
Again, there are lower cost alternatives that don't put so much sugar and carbohydrate into your soil at each use.
Sweet is essentially liquid epsom salt.I believe "sweet" by botanicare is essentially just molasses, correct me if I'm wrong.
Why does it matter if the carb profile is 'diverse' or not? I know yeast a lot better than I know microbes and to yeast, sugar is essential sugar. Some ferment easier than others but the end results are always the same; a larger population of yeast and more alcohol.Still, the diverse carbohydrate profile is part of the reason why molasses is used.
Yeast is just one kind of micro-organism; it's classified in the Fungi kingdom (a eukaryote), but apparently it differs from lots of other fungi that live in soil. Still even different strains of yeast have their own preference as to the sugars they like to grow on, depending on the conditions they are in.Sweet is essentially liquid epsom salt.
Why does it matter if the carb profile is 'diverse' or not? I know yeast a lot better than I know microbes and to yeast, sugar is essential sugar. Some ferment easier than others but the end results are always the same; a larger population of yeast and more alcohol.
Good to know!!ҖҗlegilizeitҗҖ;6327602 said:molasses can be used the entire time but stopping like a week before harvest isnt a bad idea. if you add to much molasses your soil will start to stink