SxIstew
Well-Known Member
You are creating One form of Bacilius bacteria with the LAB.And it has multipurpose use as not just an organism that breaks down your soil to feed your plants better, but it kills orders and pathogens in animal bedding.
So much you can utilize it for and if you can make it for cheap the better.
I think the difference between week and strong LAB is using whole grain verses minute maid rice
non chlorinated h20, keeping uv light out. Collecting only the infected liquid and use it with milk (source could make difference)
Again this separates this into a purely LAB
At this point Perhaps P3 using something other than Moloasses or different form of sugar.
But perhaps at this ration of 1 to 1 sugar to LAB to stabilize it is where they are not diluting it further to a 20 to 1 as they do in natural Japanese farming.
And packing it at a higher concentration charging more. This could be a difference in CFU.
Anywise we now all can benefit whether it produces the same as P3 we shall see, but it does do what it has always done for mankind in the form given as I have shared.
There are 7 different strains of 4 different species of Bacilius in P3.
Sorry, I will not try to make my own. I've talked with the owner of this company quite a bit and feel that his product is essential to growth promotion.
I will not work without it. If I run low. I can afford to order more.
I would much rather leave the creation of such products to the professionals.
Bacillus Subtilis
- Well known cattle feed ingredient
- Spores are viable for decades; common soil inoculant: frees up nutrients from food sources
- Symbiotic with roots as a colonizer; antagonistic to pathogens
Bacillus Licheniformis
- Found in soil and on bird feathers
- Protease producer (especially breaks down feathers)
- Biological “laundry detergent”
- Adapts well to alkaline areas
Bacillus Amyloliquefaciens
- Source of the BamH1 restrictive enzyme (stifles virus and pathogens)
- Source of Subtilisin, an organic “laundry detergent”
- Causes starch hydrolysis of green plants
- Produces Barnase, an antibiotic protein
Bacillus Pumilis
- Anti-fungal
- Colonizes roots to prevent fungus formation
- Highly stress resistant
All are considered “rhizobacteria” for they breakdown atmospheric nitrogen into a compound easy to uptake by plants.
Summary of P[SUP]3 [/SUP] Prolific Plant Probiotic™
One dose (1 inch of pellets) contains:
- 600+ million CFUs of Bacillus microbes
- Micronutrient spectrum package usually depleted from soil
- Amino acids spectrum package critical for plant life
- Delivered on a carrier of plant roughage
- Contains seven strains from the above mentioned four Bacillus species