Mycorrhizal fungi applications for cannabis - the caveats

Uncle Ben

Well-Known Member
Just a few comments - the endo/ecto hyphae can not be seen by the naked eye. If you're using a rich organic mix that has compost or a manure product in it, the native microbes in your mix will "eat them suckas"..... stuff you put in, too much of a good thing is many times not only expensive and is big waste, but if it makes you feel good, then go for it. Remember, plants grow well under conditions that they are getting the right salts in the right ratio, essential nutrients. There are some beneficial nutrients that might enhance disease resistance and such.......

Bacteria are found in abundance in the soils of grass fields, prairie plains..... fungi amongst trees, forests.

Have fun,
UB
 

dirt clean

Well-Known Member
well, as to the naked eye their man, lol, no, but we can see the rest of the world clinging to it. I got many a photo right here of a nice ecto fungi web as evidenced by the larger dirt structure connected to the root ball. I mean they pick up the plant and the non myco plant is shown next to a myco innoculated plant and they look drastically different in the root area. The soil web is "there". Best explained by a googled pic. You can see both in this fashion I beleive.

I nice fungi to bacteria ratio is a good bet for a big annual like mj. It is time that predicts weather it is a fungi or bacteria dominated soil. Plants in the forest are older. The plant attracts what it will. There is no doubt a good myco and bacteria rich soil will help the plant. And it is free. Just bubble.:)

Seriously it is more than disease that these microrganisms help with. This is standard science. :)

As to killing off what I add. Not really sure that they would. As they would most likely love a fresh innoculation. Most likely in an indoor mj setup the myco is dead due to salts and P overdose. Same as bacteria. For the lazy, such as msyelf, the benefits outway the free or 12 dollar startup cost. I am finding although with the increased help from the bacteria care would have to be taken not tip burn. Not by much, and really that is awesome! I am finding as it is saving me a ton of money. ;) Way less than all chem route. A lot less fert is neeeded.
 

curious.george

Well-Known Member
I use this stuff from fungi.com and along with a little fish fertilizer to feed the spores I purchased in coco coir. The coco coir comes in a brick that expands with water. I mix the salt nutes, fish fertilizer, and spores in the water before dropping my compacted brick in that soup to soak it up.

In 7 days I can see the fungi strands in the coco! Not with a microscope, just by looking and not even from very close up, I will see patches of white fungi in my medium. Also I can transplant sooner, without the stuff from fungi.com if I transplant too soon, the plants root system will not be big enough to hold the medium together. With the stuff from fungi.com the medium pops out of the container as one big mass that hold together. The other thing I am 100% sure of that is impacted by the addition of beneficial spores changes the smell of my medium when dispose of my used coco. Without the spores the coco sometimes had a rotten or manure like smell, but with the spores the medium has a nice earthy smell.
Uncle Ben, do you not believe me?

One last point: A few years back I was reading about mycorrhizal fungus and organic hydroponics and I got a bunch of random organic products and spores and it was a huge disaster. It took some time to realize I needed to not add a lot of random stuff to my root zone. I think adding mycorrhizal spores is often done with a lot of random organic stuff and this is just a bad idea.
 

bicycle racer

Well-Known Member
i do the smell test for root health when i harvest i tear open the root ball from a harvested hempy or soil grow it has a pleasant earthy clean smell. if there is any stagnant rotten or sulphur like smell thats bad and also limp or discolored roots is also an indicator of poor root health. i do feel additional funguses and bacterial populations are beneficial and at worst do no harm.
 

Uncle Ben

Well-Known Member
I use this stuff from fungi.com and along with a little fish fertilizer to feed the spores I purchased in coco coir. The coco coir comes in a brick that expands with water. I mix the salt nutes, fish fertilizer, and spores in the water before dropping my compacted brick in that soup to soak it up.

In 7 days I can see the fungi strands in the coco! Not with a microscope, just by looking and not even from very close up, I will see patches of white fungi in my medium. Also I can transplant sooner, without the stuff from fungi.com if I transplant too soon, the plants root system will not be big enough to hold the medium together. With the stuff from fungi.com the medium pops out of the container as one big mass that hold together. The other thing I am 100% sure of that is impacted by the addition of beneficial spores changes the smell of my medium when dispose of my used coco. Without the spores the coco sometimes had a rotten or manure like smell, but with the spores the medium has a nice earthy smell.
Uncle Ben, do you not believe me?
Sure that's myco, or is it some other stuff? Perhaps you're seeing the mat although you did say you see fungi filaments..... don't know and it really doesn't matter. If it works for you then that's what counts.

Arbuscular mycorrhizas are roots with specific types of fungi inside them and in the surrounding soil. This type of mycorrhiza is formed by fungi in a group generally referred to as arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. These fungi are characterised by having very thin threadlike structures, called hyphae, which are between 1 and 10 thousandths of a millimetre in width.
http://www.soilhealth.com/fungi/
 
In regards to benefical bacteria I fully agree with on person's post here that MJ like bacteria more so than mycorr. If one gets into a pinch and does not want to spend a crapload of money of those sold (and they are expensive) then try what I did. WAIT, better yet...send me $5.00 and I will send you 5oz of Benefical Bacteria and when I run out I'm gonna run to the grocery store and get some more Rid-X. Yelp, that's right the same product ppl use for the septic tank and it's $6.00 for just over 10oz. It's all benefical bacteria with molasses. I've used it a few times and have not seen any less growth than my homemade bacteria. Matter of fact when I brew my tea I always add a TBSP of Rid-X.....
 

bicycle racer

Well-Known Member
i would assume its similar to organic digesters found in products for ponds and the like. needless to say there useful but contain no myco funguses so that would have to be sourced elsewhere.
 

tea tree

Well-Known Member
for a good cheap product I would say rooters is a good deal. In fact all the myco products look good, and in fact if you are using soil like light wariior it should have your myco. Your plant will feed them carbs and stuff and it should all work as decent soil health. However we are growing inside in containers and also some hi P applications. Fungi cannot tolerate anyhtng P over 10 so that settles that. But withthe addition of fungi and bacteria we dont really need that much fert. That is one purpose of ading the beasties. They make full use of all the fert. None is lost, both with bigger root zones and more bacteria to feed plant. The myco gives a bigger root zone. Our variety should atract endo, but maybe it would take some ecto as we grow it so long. I asked the master gardenr of SD and she said to keep experimenting but nothing should hurt. Obscure thing to ask. Lol.

So rooters, then guardian, then humbolt, then the advanced is how I looked at it. Rooters is probably good enough but who knows how well they control the quality. Alsp the weights and varites change. I looked and it looked you get what ou pay for, but rooters looked ok. So yeah, but I would add some, man look for pics of plants with and without on google. They are concinving

Oh yeah, rootersi si 10 bucks

oh yeah, in my soil web manual those strands of myco are good. Add that or better yet grow in it it says. I read to use some as a topdress to soil.
 

Chumlie

Well-Known Member
uncle ben I got this stuff from the health store. Its called root zone by Down to Earth Distributors.

 

curious.george

Well-Known Member
I was suggesting some sort of controlled test in this other related thread:
https://www.rollitup.org/advanced-marijuana-cultivation/202270-bacterea-increases-plant-growth-2.html

anyone interested in participating with their myco. solution? Seems like there are a few different products out there and it is impossible to compare them with the currently published information we have. I was thinking of a test with some simple plant like basil, to not use up room in the grow closet with a experiment, and maybe an experiment where we mix it with something like earth worm castings and observe the fungi growth.
 

tea tree

Well-Known Member
read about the soil food web. Googling this or reading the book, the soil food web by jeff lowenfels will give you all the evidence and knowledge you need about bacteria and fungi. It actually is pretty standard to all gardens and dirt and some special moves should be made with comtainer gardens and or any soil where chemical ferts or P products over 10 have been used.

Chem salts kill your beneficial organisms in the soil. I use rooters myco for 10 dollars, and super plant tonic, and worm castings and compost tea (which is all you ever rally need) to get the beasties back or into my soil. Also I feed them some molasses to feed them. Once in the soil the plant will attract the ones it likes. Most annuals will choose an endo fungi and the bacteria to go along with it. It will need bacteria more than fungi in the soil but all plants need the myco for the roots.

Plants without myco are pathetic I have seen in many photos, right next to plants easily twice as big. It is a big deal to have myco, also let ferts need to be used.
 

curious.george

Well-Known Member
read about the soil food web. Googling this or reading the book, the soil food web by jeff lowenfels will give you all the evidence and knowledge you need about bacteria and fungi. It actually is pretty standard to all gardens and dirt and some special moves should be made with comtainer gardens and or any soil where chemical ferts or P products over 10 have been used.

Chem salts kill your beneficial organisms in the soil. I use rooters myco for 10 dollars, and super plant tonic, and worm castings and compost tea (which is all you ever rally need) to get the beasties back or into my soil. Also I feed them some molasses to feed them. Once in the soil the plant will attract the ones it likes. Most annuals will choose an endo fungi and the bacteria to go along with it. It will need bacteria more than fungi in the soil but all plants need the myco for the roots.

Plants without myco are pathetic I have seen in many photos, right next to plants easily twice as big. It is a big deal to have myco, also let ferts need to be used.
I was not questioning if the stuff works at all, the question I was trying to answer is:
Product A cost X money,
Product B cost Y money.
Will I get more benefit from A B
--- or ---
X Y

each place that sells the spores sells a slightly different product, I use an expensive product that is super concentrated. Would I save money with a less expensive product, or is it just diluted or not as alive. Maybe one place stores there stuff for a long time and it is mostly dead. Maybe a trace of one product is as good as a lot of another. Does one product work much better due to stronger strains regardless of how much is applied. These are the kinds of questions I look to investigate. Make sense?
 

Uncle Ben

Well-Known Member
I was not questioning if the stuff works at all, the question I was trying to answer is:
Product A cost X money,
Product B cost Y money.
Will I get more benefit from A B
--- or ---
X Y

each place that sells the spores sells a slightly different product, I use an expensive product that is super concentrated. Would I save money with a less expensive product, or is it just diluted or not as alive. Maybe one place stores there stuff for a long time and it is mostly dead. Maybe a trace of one product is as good as a lot of another. Does one product work much better due to stronger strains regardless of how much is applied. These are the kinds of questions I look to investigate. Make sense?
No one knows. It's all about blind faith.

Solution, suggest you buy yourself an electron microscope.
 

jberry

Well-Known Member
the source matters... myco apply is not the best....



Products were tested by Western Labs. The lab tests 50ml samples of product. To put the data into perspective Ron Wallance, a well known Giant Pumpkin grower, had his cover crop soil tested. His spore count was 600, showing that common Mycorrhizal products are lacking in potency. Although Western Labs has said that anything above 30 is considered 'good'.
The product from RTI that appears in these charts is Pumpkin Pro. We settled on the 3000 figure because our counts varied from as high as 10,000 and down to 1500.







https://www.rollitup.org/advanced-marijuana-cultivation/262494-mycorrhiza-101-a-2.html#post3340230
 
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