Growingseedy
Member
Want to know more about organic!
Me too buddy, I had to chuckle when i read that organic and bio organics was invented in California. Of course it was, before these dudes no plants grew..... VSS is literally just a bunch of white labeled mycos and bacteria with some clever words to market it. I am not saying it doesnt work, of course it does, I mean plants have been forming relationships with fungi and bacteria for years, just as we have as humans.This might shed some light as to why it's effective:
http://cdn.arbico-organics.com/downloads/1305420_Veganic Special Sauce-OGTea_12916.pdf
Just found this also and it says quite a bit:
http://greenbookpages.com/reviews/hydroponics/og-tea-veganic-special-sauce-microbial-tea/
I love doing research for The Greater of All. I can't say that I entirely agree with the authors spin on how compost teas were discovered but I did find it informative.
My biobizz out does kylekushmans "vegamatrix" all week month year decade etc. Ill never buy another feed line again....So, yes it's only 98% organic and they decided not to pay for the organic label even though they exceed the standard of organic by a shit ton and yes that is a true measurement. The chemicals in vegamatrix are not used as a growth hormone. It's just to make the nutrients better absorbed and last. Your not going to be tasting these in the end product and not going to be worried about health risk of using these types of chemicals. I appreciate the honesty of Kyle kushman letting use know what it's made up of. He does this because he has nothing to hide.
Considering the volume of peer reviewed publications that show animal biomass has an important role in soil nutrient cycling in the wild (particularly nitrogen), I find this "fact" hard to believe. For example, that leaf litter is eaten by fungi, which in turn is eaten by fungal eating animals such as springtails. Then we have detritivore animals. Plants, fungi, bacteria, and these animals have co-evolved to increase the efficiency of nutrient recycling to benefit all involved. For example, Metarhizium and Beauveria fungal species are insect pathogens that also happen to form intercellular root associations like mycorrhizae. Yeah, they attack and kill living insects to give their processed nutrients directly to plants in exchange for carbon. How cool is that? https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4553473/... most plants in the wild derive their sustenance from leaf litter and other dead/decaying plant matter.
Oh man, you are trying to punk on Stow and DonTesla. OMG get the fuck outta here!!! Neither one of these guys are on here anymore and they have WAY more clout than you will ever have on this forum. You are talking about two greats in the organic section. Someone tell this little punk that he needs to sit down when he's in class...Considering the volume of peer reviewed publications that show animal biomass has an important role in soil nutrient cycling in the wild (particularly nitrogen), I find this "fact" hard to believe. For example, that leaf litter is eaten by fungi, which in turn is eaten by fungal eating animals such as springtails. Then we have detritivore animals. Plants, fungi, bacteria, and these animals have co-evolved to increase the efficiency of nutrient recycling to benefit all involved. For example, Metarhizium and Beauveria fungal species are insect pathogens that also happen to form intercellular root associations like mycorrhizae. Yeah, they attack and kill living insects to give their processed nutrients directly to plants in exchange for carbon. How cool is that? https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4553473/
I would guess my no-till 150 gallon indoor pot has at least a pound or two of living animals in at any one time, and likely more (counting the worms). These guys poop, add chitin, and all their nitrogen and other nutrients are returned when they die. <--- my pot after watering.
As organic growers, we can't be concentrated on only one tropic level because nature is way more complex than that. We don't necessarily have to understand the science behind it if we just let it do its thing. Applying vegan ideology to the extreme when growing plants is a bit silly IMO for that reason.
Do you have anything to say about my post or the research paper I provided a link to? I wasn't talking about anyone and I have no idea who Stow and DonTesla are. It wasn't my intention to punk on anyone. I was just sharing my thoughts on this particular subject. I wouldn't mind hearing your thoughts too.Oh man, you are trying to punk on Stow and DonTesla. OMG get the fuck outta here!!! Neither one of these guys are on here anymore and they have WAY more clout than you will ever have on this forum. You are talking about two greats in the organic section. Someone tell this little punk that he needs to sit down when he's in class...
It's because you are new here.I have no idea who Stow and DonTesla are.