garlictrain
Well-Known Member
Welcome to the world of "TEAMING WITH MICROBES"! It's a book that opened my eyes and enhanced my growing ability tenfold, check it out!
But to get right to it Ehan what is your access to nutrients like? MED STATE? GROW STORE, HARDWARE STORE?
Traditionally a brewed tea is a bubbled (actively aerated) tea but you can go as simple as bottled nutrient that you premix in a resevoir then feed, to top dressing your dry organic material (literally dumping a cup or 2 of bone meal at the base of the plant and watering it in). Bone meal doesn't brake down as quickly as liquid nutrient so it cannot be 100% immed avail to your plant.
Also to ambe yes sir that molasses will in fact help your situation but i strongly feel like any semi extreme yellowing in the leaves/ purpling in the stems needs to be treated with a foliar while still in veg/mid flower, by spraying at least the yellowing leaves you are instantly replenishing the plant through the stomata with N, instead of relying on root uptake alone. but it can be said also that just providing your plants molasses to stimulate the "micro herd" of beneficial bacteria and fungi is not enough and it could even slow or stunt the growth of a heavily deficient plant. a simple compost water will do the same thing (the same stuff you used for your mix ) Simply add 1-2 cups compost to 1/gal of water and shake and let sit for a few hrs in the shade, strain and apply. if you have a "hot" compost it would be very wise to ph and ppm your foliar solution.
But to get right to it Ehan what is your access to nutrients like? MED STATE? GROW STORE, HARDWARE STORE?
Traditionally a brewed tea is a bubbled (actively aerated) tea but you can go as simple as bottled nutrient that you premix in a resevoir then feed, to top dressing your dry organic material (literally dumping a cup or 2 of bone meal at the base of the plant and watering it in). Bone meal doesn't brake down as quickly as liquid nutrient so it cannot be 100% immed avail to your plant.
Also to ambe yes sir that molasses will in fact help your situation but i strongly feel like any semi extreme yellowing in the leaves/ purpling in the stems needs to be treated with a foliar while still in veg/mid flower, by spraying at least the yellowing leaves you are instantly replenishing the plant through the stomata with N, instead of relying on root uptake alone. but it can be said also that just providing your plants molasses to stimulate the "micro herd" of beneficial bacteria and fungi is not enough and it could even slow or stunt the growth of a heavily deficient plant. a simple compost water will do the same thing (the same stuff you used for your mix ) Simply add 1-2 cups compost to 1/gal of water and shake and let sit for a few hrs in the shade, strain and apply. if you have a "hot" compost it would be very wise to ph and ppm your foliar solution.