MrBaker
Well-Known Member
@ Seamaiden....and anyone else that wants to listen.
First, not only am I pissed that you're married, but I'm pissed that you had access to fresh kick-ass hefeweizen.
OK on more serious notes
- The seagrass tank is comin' slow because its takin' me a while to piece together directions from an old school aquarium fiend, aquarium science, and just getting a frickin' stubborn grass to grow. so far I've managed to keep most of it alive. The hermit crabs are supposed to be there for "clean-up" sort of like a plecostomus in fresh water, and they are hard to kill. I'd probably shit myself daily if I can get it to the point where I have seahorse and pipefish.
Back on topic: I see that the focus has somewhat switched to "overclocking" the plants (ah crap computer analogy for plants), and additives for making the plants/soil microbes healthy. Perhaps the microbes are making all the "meth" we need for this runner, or maybe not enough research has been done on this subject...I vote both as of right now.
Regarding the mycorrhizae I do remember now that many evergreen trees like pine form pretty tight relationships with mycorrhizae. So, both cannabis and evergreens being acid-o-philes could point towards a possible relationship between mycorrhizae and canna-roots. The mycorrhizae would obviously greatly expand the "reach" of the roots, but I don't think the root structure would be expanded itself (but effectively it is because of the mycorr's reach).
Another question, although related, would be whether N-fixing bacteria can be found within soil cultures inoculated with N-Fixing bacteria (aka HIPPIE JUICE ftw). Its hard to isolate a lot of agrobacteria. We may have to go with qualitative and quantitative outcomes to make a good guess on if Hippie Juice works.
So thats a lot of words for not so many answers...I'm sorry for that. On the bright side, I'm seeing in the Dr. Earth roll-call a lot of microbes that do a lot of different things as far as metabolism needs and products. A wide variesty of plant needs may be satisfied by all the species listed, and others that may not be so well known (I always assume humans can know much more than we do.) I will look up those species of bacteria when I have time (chemist job over soon...must...get into...grad school), and then offer up some ideas even if microbio is not one of my strong suits.
As far as my own roots from the last indoor crop...I used molasses for the entire flowering period in conjunction with nutes (my hippie juice is no where near as good as yours). That was ~10 weeks worth of use, and I can say with confidence that the size of rootballs, length of the roots, and amount of root hairs increased over the last crop that used molasses for maybe 5 weeks. I did not see any obvious mycorrhizae, but without using some kind of inoculation or soil from outside I didn't really expect to see it. I also had to water less..maybe because the root system was bigger.
First, not only am I pissed that you're married, but I'm pissed that you had access to fresh kick-ass hefeweizen.
OK on more serious notes
- The seagrass tank is comin' slow because its takin' me a while to piece together directions from an old school aquarium fiend, aquarium science, and just getting a frickin' stubborn grass to grow. so far I've managed to keep most of it alive. The hermit crabs are supposed to be there for "clean-up" sort of like a plecostomus in fresh water, and they are hard to kill. I'd probably shit myself daily if I can get it to the point where I have seahorse and pipefish.
Back on topic: I see that the focus has somewhat switched to "overclocking" the plants (ah crap computer analogy for plants), and additives for making the plants/soil microbes healthy. Perhaps the microbes are making all the "meth" we need for this runner, or maybe not enough research has been done on this subject...I vote both as of right now.
Regarding the mycorrhizae I do remember now that many evergreen trees like pine form pretty tight relationships with mycorrhizae. So, both cannabis and evergreens being acid-o-philes could point towards a possible relationship between mycorrhizae and canna-roots. The mycorrhizae would obviously greatly expand the "reach" of the roots, but I don't think the root structure would be expanded itself (but effectively it is because of the mycorr's reach).
Another question, although related, would be whether N-fixing bacteria can be found within soil cultures inoculated with N-Fixing bacteria (aka HIPPIE JUICE ftw). Its hard to isolate a lot of agrobacteria. We may have to go with qualitative and quantitative outcomes to make a good guess on if Hippie Juice works.
So thats a lot of words for not so many answers...I'm sorry for that. On the bright side, I'm seeing in the Dr. Earth roll-call a lot of microbes that do a lot of different things as far as metabolism needs and products. A wide variesty of plant needs may be satisfied by all the species listed, and others that may not be so well known (I always assume humans can know much more than we do.) I will look up those species of bacteria when I have time (chemist job over soon...must...get into...grad school), and then offer up some ideas even if microbio is not one of my strong suits.
As far as my own roots from the last indoor crop...I used molasses for the entire flowering period in conjunction with nutes (my hippie juice is no where near as good as yours). That was ~10 weeks worth of use, and I can say with confidence that the size of rootballs, length of the roots, and amount of root hairs increased over the last crop that used molasses for maybe 5 weeks. I did not see any obvious mycorrhizae, but without using some kind of inoculation or soil from outside I didn't really expect to see it. I also had to water less..maybe because the root system was bigger.