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InvisiblePhish_Dude
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the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses
    #40231 - 05/26/08 07:40 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Why Molasses?

The reason nutrient manufacturer’s have “discovered” molasses is the simple fact that it’s a great source of carbohydrates to stimulate the growth of beneficial microorganisms. “Carbohydrate” is really just a fancy word for sugar, and molasses is
the best sugar for horticultural use. Folks who have read some of our prior essays know that we are big fans of promoting and nourishing soil life, and that we attribute a good portion of our growing success to the attention we pay to building a thriving “micro-herd” to work in concert with plant roots to digest and assimilate nutrients. We really do buy into the old organic gardening adage - “Feed the soil not the plant.”

to put it bluntly the micro organisms feed off the molasses and any other organic fertilizer in the soil and secrete many beneficial nutrients that the plants feed on. there are many different kinds of molasses i would recommend blackstrap, if thats not available then original unsulphured works fine.

now here are a few recipes:

1 Gallon of water

1 TBSP of guano (for a flowering mix we’d use Jamaican or Indonesian Bat Guano - for a more general use fertilizer we
would choose Peruvian Seabird Guano.)

1 tsp blackstrap or sugar beet molasses

We mix the ingredients directly into the water and allow the tea mix to brew for 24 hours. It’s best to use an aquarium pump to aerate the tea, but an occasional shaking can suffice if necessary and still produce a quality tea. We will give you one hint from hard personal experience, make sure if you use the shake method that you hold the lid on securely, nobody
appreciate having a crap milkshake spread over the room.

Some folks prefer to use a lady’s nylon or stocking to hold the guano and keep it from making things messy, but we figure the organic matter the manure can contribute to the soil is a good thing. Using this method we feel like we are getting the benefits of a manure tea and a guano top-dressing all together in the same application. If you prefer to use the stocking method, feel free to feed the”tea bag”leftovers to your worm or compost bin, even after a good brewing there’s lots of organic goodness left in that crap!

We also use molasses to sweeten and enrich Alfalfa meal teas. Our standard recipe for this use is:
4 gallons of water

1 cup of fine ground alfalfa meal

1 TBSP blackstrap or sugar beet molasses

After a 24 hour brew, this 100% plant-based fertilizer is ready for application. Alfalfa is a great organic plant food, with many benefits above and beyond just the N–P-K it can contribute to a soil mix or tea. We do plan to cover Alfalfa and it’s many uses in greater detail soon in yet another thread. We prefer to mix our alfalfa meal directly into the tea, but many gardeners use the stocking”tea bag”method with great effectiveness, both work well, it’s really just a matter of personal preference.

The alfalfa tea recipe we described can be used as a soil drench, and also as a foliar feed. And foliar feeding is the final use of molasses we’d like to detail. Foliar feeding, for the unfamiliar, is simply the art of using fine mist sprays as a way to get nutrients directly to the plant through the minute pores a plant”breathes”through. It is by far the quickest and
most effective way to correct nutrient deficiencies, and can be an important part of any gardener’s toolbox.

more to come soon, enjoy!


--------------------
organic growers check out:
basic compost tea guide
organic goodies

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InvisiblePhish_Dude
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #50121 - 06/03/08 08:26 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Molasses For Organic Pest Control


One final benefit of molasses is it’s ability to be used in the control of a couple of common pests encountered in gardening. The most commonly known use of molasses is it’s ability to help control Fire Ants, but we’ve also found an internet reference to the ability of molasses to control white cabbage moths in the UK, so molasses could be an effective pest deterrent in more ways that we are aware. As we said before, there are several references we’ve run across refering to the ability of molasses to control Fire Ants. Since we’re not intimately familiar with this particular use of molasses, and rather than simply re-write and re-word
another’s work, we thought we’d defer to the experts. So for this section of the current version of the Molasses Manual, we will simply post a reference article we found that covers topic in better detail than we currently can ourselves.


Molasses Makes Fire Ants Move Out
By Pat Ploegsma, reprinted from Native Plant Society of Texas News
Summer 1999

Have you ever started planting in your raised beds and found fire ant highrises? Are you tired of being covered with welts after gardening? Put down that blowtorch and check out these excellent organic and non-toxic solutions. Malcolm Beck1, organic farmer extraordinaire and owner of Garden-Ville Inc., did some experiments that showed that molasses is a good addition to organic fertilizer (more on fertilizer in the next issue).

When using molasses in the fertilizer spray for his fruit trees he noticed that the fire ants moved out from under the trees. “I got an opportunity to see if molasses really moved fire ants. In my vineyard, I had a 500 foot row of root stock vines cut back to a stump that needed grafting. The fire ants had made themselves at home along that row. The mounds averaged three feet apart. There was no way a person could work there without being eaten alive! I dissolved 4 tablespoons of molasses in each gallon of water and sprayed along the drip pipe. By the next day the fire ants had moved four feet in each direction. We were able to graft the vines without a single ant bothering us.”

This gave him the idea for developing an organic fire ant killer that is 30% orange oil and 70% liquid compost made from manure and molasses. The orange oil softens and dissolves the ant’s exoskeleton, making them susceptible to attack by the microbes in the compost, while the molasses feeds the microbes and also smothers the ants. After the insects are dead,
everything becomes energy-rich soil conditioner and will not harm any plant it touches. It can be used on any insect including mosquitoes and their larvae.

Break a small hole in the crust in the center of the mound then quickly!!! pour the solution into the hole to flood the mound and then drench the ants on top. Large mounds may need a second application. Available at Garden-Ville Square in Stafford, it has a pleasant lemonade smell. According to Mark Bowen2, local landscaper and Houston habitat gardening expert, fire ants thrive on disturbed land and sunny grassy areas. “Organic matter provides a good habitat for fire ant predators such as beneficial nematodes, fungi, etc. Other conditions favoring fire ant predators include shading the ground with plantings, good soil construction practices and use of plants taller than turfgrasses.” He recommends pouring boiling soapy water over shallow mounds or using AscendTM. “Ascend is a fire ant bait which contains a fungal by-product called avermectin and a corn and soybean-based grit bait to attract fire ants. Ascend works slowly enough to get the queen or queens and it controls ants by sterilizing and/or killing them outright.”

Malcolm Beck also did some experiments with Diatomaceous Earth - DE - (skeletal remains of algae which is ground into an abrasive dust) which confirmed that DE also kills fire ants. He mixes 4 oz. of DE into the top of the mound with lethal results. According to Beck, DE only works during dry weather on dry ant mounds. Pet food kept outdoors will stay ant free
if placed on top of a tray with several inches of DE

1Beck, Malcolm. The Garden-Ville Method: Lessons in Nature. Third Edition. San Antonio, TX: Garden-Ville, Inc., 1998.
2Bowen, Mark, with Mary Bowen. Habitat Gardening for Houston and Southeast Texas. Houston, TX: River Bend Publishing
Company, 1998.

I came across this home remedy from the UK for white cabbage moths.

Mix a tablespoon of molasses in 1 liter of warm water and let cool.. spray every week or every 2 weeks as required for white cabbage moth..they hate it..and I think it would be good soil conditioner as well if any drops on your soil.. It works for me...but gotta do it before white butterfly lays eggs...otherwise you might have to use the 2 finger method and squash
grubs for your garden birds..


--------------------
organic growers check out:
basic compost tea guide
organic goodies

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OfflineYrat
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses (moved) [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #50585 - 06/04/08 09:53 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

This thread was moved from Outdoor Cultivation.

Reason:
user request

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OfflineEvan
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #50594 - 06/04/08 10:04 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

I use mollases in the later half of flower and have no complaints. Seems to help with yeild as well as taste, mollases is good stuff.

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InvisiblePhish_Dude
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Evan]
    #51081 - 06/04/08 08:57 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

improves soil, taste, yield, its cheap, organic, cant go wrong there!
peace


--------------------
organic growers check out:
basic compost tea guide
organic goodies

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Offlineerb
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #52071 - 06/05/08 10:10 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Rock hard ride free!

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Offlinefantasy2reality
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: erb]
    #56206 - 06/12/08 08:50 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

when is a good time to apply to an outdoor plant?

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InvisiblePhish_Dude
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #56486 - 06/12/08 04:44 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

fantasy2reality said:
when is a good time to apply to an outdoor plant?



right from the start, just start at low doses and work your way up;)

Seedlings less than 1 month old nutrient tea mix-
5 TBS. Black Strap Molasses
1-cup earthworm castings/5 gallons of water every 3rd watering

Vegetative mix-
1/3 cup Peruvian Seabird Guano (PSG)
1/3 cup High N Bat Guano (Mexican)
1/3 cup Earth Worm Castings (EWC)
5 TBS. Maxi-crop 1-0-4 powdered kelp extract
5 TBS. Liquid Karma (optional)
5 TBS. Black Strap Molasses
@ 1-cup mix/5 gallons of water every 3rd watering.

Flowering nutrient tea mix:
2/3 cup Peruvian Seabird Guano
2/3 cup Earth Worm Castings
2/3 cup High P Guano (Indonesian or Jamaican)
5 TBS. Maxi-crop 1-0-4 powdered kelp extract
5 TBS. Black Strap Molasses


--------------------
organic growers check out:
basic compost tea guide
organic goodies

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Offlinefantasy2reality
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #56558 - 06/12/08 06:27 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Now, after mixing all the ingredients... do I feed all in one watering? or spread it out throughout the course of the week?

I'm new to growing MJ, so please be patient. I just took some photo's of my best plant so far... I have three different locations within 50 square yards of each other.. one location has three plants, one has two, and the other has one plant.

Don't know why it worked out that way, but it did.
I'm hoping I get at least two females.
But I am new to the whole thing, and just trying to learn as I go.

I do have fish emulsion made by Bonide, I also have MG bloom booster for when the time comes. I already made the molasses tea, I used quail shit.... is this okay? I raise quail, and a friend told me that as long as I let it sun and dry, that it would be cool...
Thanks for all your help for a beginner... I'm hoping to harvest some decent stuff to have for the year. I don't smoke that often so a little bit will last me forever.








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OfflineSirius
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #56796 - 06/13/08 02:23 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

fantasy2reality said:
I used quail shit.... is this okay? I raise quail, and a friend told me that as long as I let it sun and dry, that it would be cool...




Don't know enough about organic to answer your question, but raising quail sounds like fun. Any pictures? :smile:


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Offlineerb
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Sirius]
    #56830 - 06/13/08 08:24 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Should be fine..i know you can add them to a compost pile also.
As long as they aren't fresh you should be good.
I wouldnt use as much as you would with horse manure, bird droppings are much higher in nitrogen.
If that don't work you can always make jewelery out of it.

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Offlinefantasy2reality
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: erb]
    #56945 - 06/13/08 02:38 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

erb said:
Should be fine..i know you can add them to a compost pile also.
As long as they aren't fresh you should be good.
I wouldnt use as much as you would with horse manure, bird droppings are much higher in nitrogen.
If that don't work you can always make jewelery out of it.




yeah make a turd necklace... like them ones made of candy? LMAO take a bite when your feeling low on N!!! LMAO
want a matching set of earrings and bracelet? ROTFLMFAO

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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #57174 - 06/13/08 09:39 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

i've been looking for this thread, here's my question

what is the growth increase with plants you've fed molasses to and plants you haven't fed molasses to.

let's say I was planting something, and had a month and a half before the lighting changed to flower.

i had to get a few plants as tall as possible in just 2 and a half months. What would be the chance I'd succeed feeding my plants molasses as opposed to not feeding them molasses(and miracle grow)


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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InvisiblePhish_Dude
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #57244 - 06/14/08 12:45 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

fantasy2reality said:
Now, after mixing all the ingredients... do I feed all in one watering? or spread it out throughout the course of the week?

I'm new to growing MJ, so please be patient. I just took some photo's of my best plant so far... I have three different locations within 50 square yards of each other.. one location has three plants, one has two, and the other has one plant.

Don't know why it worked out that way, but it did.
I'm hoping I get at least two females.
But I am new to the whole thing, and just trying to learn as I go.

I do have fish emulsion made by Bonide, I also have MG bloom booster for when the time comes. I already made the molasses tea, I used quail shit.... is this okay? I raise quail, and a friend told me that as long as I let it sun and dry, that it would be cool...
Thanks for all your help for a beginner... I'm hoping to harvest some decent stuff to have for the year. I don't smoke that often so a little bit will last me forever.












Put a fish tank bubbler in your solution to let aerate.
After about 24 hours you will see foam start to form at the top of the solution. This will let you know that the micro-population of beneficial bacteria are starting to breed. Continue to brew for another 24 hours. Once this process is complete you will have an excellent foliar feed or a soil drench.
if you cant do that put in bottles and shake a few times a day.

i assume you are using the vegetative mix if so than feed every 3rd watering.
as for flowering mixture use every watering.
peace


--------------------
organic growers check out:
basic compost tea guide
organic goodies

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InvisiblePhish_Dude
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #57246 - 06/14/08 12:49 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
i've been looking for this thread, here's my question

what is the growth increase with plants you've fed molasses to and plants you haven't fed molasses to.

let's say I was planting something, and had a month and a half before the lighting changed to flower.

i had to get a few plants as tall as possible in just 2 and a half months. What would be the chance I'd succeed feeding my plants molasses as opposed to not feeding them molasses(and miracle grow)



idk this calls for an experiment!
btw molasses does way more than just makes grow faster: increases potency, yield, improves soil, makes more resistant to mold/contams, countless other things.


--------------------
organic growers check out:
basic compost tea guide
organic goodies

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Offlinefantasy2reality
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #57266 - 06/14/08 04:40 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:



Put a fish tank bubbler in your solution to let aerate.
After about 24 hours you will see foam start to form at the top of the solution. This will let you know that the micro-population of beneficial bacteria are starting to breed. Continue to brew for another 24 hours. Once this process is complete you will have an excellent foliar feed or a soil drench.
if you cant do that put in bottles and shake a few times a day.

i assume you are using the vegetative mix if so than feed every 3rd watering.
as for flowering mixture use every watering.
peace




Yeah, I was just going to ask you about the foam on top, lol
So it should be good to go then, I'll give here a go, and see if this is the ticket.
I asked my friend about this tea, and he said he never used it, but thought it would be EXCELLENT in production. So I'll let you guys know what goes on.
Thanks man.

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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #57441 - 06/14/08 03:09 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Phish_Dude said:
Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
i've been looking for this thread, here's my question

what is the growth increase with plants you've fed molasses to and plants you haven't fed molasses to.

let's say I was planting something, and had a month and a half before the lighting changed to flower.

i had to get a few plants as tall as possible in just 2 and a half months. What would be the chance I'd succeed feeding my plants molasses as opposed to not feeding them molasses(and miracle grow)



idk this calls for an experiment!
btw molasses does way more than just makes grow faster: increases potency, yield, improves soil, makes more resistant to mold/contams, countless other things.




yeah, I figured

here's the thing, the brown sugar feeds nitrogen fixing bacteria. it also feeds the plant which uses it as glucose/starch and helps it grow as if it had sun and water, right? I'm guessing doing this right would give a plant with 1 day of the sun the equivalent of 2 or 3 days of sun. here's the question

they say you need to make a tea, and let the brown sugar ferment until the water turns bubbly, which it will, I'm guessing more so in soil. Doing this feeds the nitrogen fixing bacteria and gives it a chance to take over, otherwise, you might end up feeding other bacteria if the tea doesn't ferment which could infect your plant and/or kill nitrogen fixing bacteria in turn giving the soil a nitrogen deficiency.

but the main thing is, if the tea ferments, won't the bacteria eat all the sugar, and not allow the plant to absorb any? this is my question, as I really want to speed up growth for the coming season, as I feel a little behind.

with 10 females, I know I could get half a pound to a few pounds of bud, but with slow growth at the first month, I don't know if I'll reach much more than an ounce from small plants.

if I could get anywhere between 4 to 8 ounces, I'd be happy.

so any help is helpful here.


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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OfflineSirius
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #57485 - 06/14/08 04:05 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
I'm guessing doing this right would give a plant with 1 day of the sun the equivalent of 2 or 3 days of sun.




Why would you guess that?


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OfflineIamasmoker
imachavel
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Sirius]
    #57489 - 06/14/08 04:11 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Sirius said:
Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
I'm guessing doing this right would give a plant with 1 day of the sun the equivalent of 2 or 3 days of sun.




Why would you guess that?




I don't know, just an estimate

you are GIVING the plant sugars that it takes awhile for it to create on it's own, right?

if there's a recipe that calls for 1 tablespoon of brown sugar in a gallon of water everytime you water your plant, aren't you giving it the equivalent of a days worth of energy?

how much sugar is in a plant? i though a teaspoon of sugar was the equivalent of the amount of sugar you find in a 6 inch tall plant

so take the mass of a 6 inch tall plant, and multiply it by the amount of tablespoons total of brown sugar you give your plant, after a few months, wouldn't you say you've given your plants a total equivalent of quite a few extra days of sun?

sugar in a plant is created with water nitrogen and sunlight, right? or am i missing something?


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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OfflineSirius
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #58343 - 06/16/08 04:57 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
you are GIVING the plant sugars that it takes awhile for it to create on it's own, right?




Something like glucose might be an end result of photosynthesis, but you still have to take into account respiration, which is the process the plant goes through to convert stored energy like that into its own, usable energy. The plant, I'm sure, has its limits on how much of this it is capable of at any point in time. I'm certain that, using this additive, you aren't going to get the equivalent of three days growth in one day. :wink:


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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Sirius]
    #58349 - 06/16/08 05:22 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

well, maybe not the total GROWTH of 2 days in one day

what I was saying is it would have the accumulated sugars of 2 days of photosynthesis in one day. Maybe not respiration and usage of this energy, but a big boost, and nitrogen as well as the bacteria eat the sugars the plant doesn't absorb.

i don't know, using fertilizers i've seen the plant grow in one day what it would in two, you don't think in total with added micro nutrients in the soil and extra sugars the plant would eventually increase it's growth by maybe 20-40%?

i hope so, pot grows too flow for me being an outdoor grower

it has it's growth spurts, but they seem few and far in between. I thought maybe cannabis had a slow rate for processing sugars. maybe in that as well just having the sugars doesn't mean the rate for processing them would increase. so what would help, sugar, and a fan? plus a little fertilizer and a good amount of light??


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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OfflineSirius
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #58462 - 06/16/08 12:05 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
i don't know, using fertilizers i've seen the plant grow in one day what it would in two, you don't think in total with added micro nutrients in the soil and extra sugars the plant would eventually increase it's growth by maybe 20-40%?




Its possible, but 200-300% probably isn't. :wink:

Quote:


maybe in that as well just having the sugars doesn't mean the rate for processing them would increase. so what would help, sugar, and a fan? plus a little fertilizer and a good amount of light??




I don't know about having a fan outdoors, but having optimal conditions across the board will make all the difference. I've read, though, that plants generally do not use more than 50% to 75% of the carbohydrates that they produce through photosynthesis, so giving those carbohydrates for the plant probably couldn't provide for that much of a boost, although I'm certain it does provide a good boost (just not a holy grail one :grin:). I'd have to imagine something like molasses really shines in grows wherein the plant receives less than optimal carbon dioxide and light, thus limiting photosynthesis. I'm just speculating here from what I've gathered so far, because I certainly haven't studied this stuff or had much first-hand experience in growing.


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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Sirius]
    #58500 - 06/16/08 12:43 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

i hear you

none the less

a plant that gains an inch and a half extra in a week, will give you an extra 16 inches in 2 months

that's not bad, maybe not extremely efficient but a lot better in the end

i'm just looking to increase my plant size
get a better yeild, don't know if I've been doing something wrong, but i usually notice a foot a month average with my cannabis plants
so if this thing starts flowering at the beginning of september, that's only 2 and a half feet away if i start growing right now

i wanted to get at least 3 - 3 and a half feet

there's supplements that go a long way with growth in hydroponic nutrients that don't have to be used just in hydroponics right?

like oyster shell.. and such?

sirius? what's your best results? and with what? maybe you should try the brown sugar, tell me how it goes


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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OfflineSirius
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #59230 - 06/17/08 09:05 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
get a better yeild, don't know if I've been doing something wrong, but i usually notice a foot a month average with my cannabis plants




What kind of strains are you growing exactly? Indicas? Its possible that the rate is a good, average rate, depending on the specific circumstances.

Quote:


there's supplements that go a long way with growth in hydroponic nutrients that don't have to be used just in hydroponics right?




Nutrients are nutrients, really, the only thing that might differ between growth mediums is concentration and time schedule of doses....

Quote:


sirius? what's your best results? and with what? maybe you should try the brown sugar, tell me how it goes




I'll let you know when I have results. :tongue: My friend is waiting to begin his first indoor grow. He's grown outdoors in the past, but it was many years ago and it was as simple as planting them outside and possibly watering them on occasion. I just do a lot of reading from a lot of sources and use my reason skills to discern the right information, and nutrients and additives is a subject I have barely little information on, beyond basics and some specifics for my friend's setup. :grin:

Anyways, all you can do is grow them out, give them the molasses/brown sugar, and hope for the best. I saw a good signature quotation somewhere else just yesterday "Get rid of your expectations, it'll ruin your grow". :smirk: You'll get what you get and learn more through the process for next time, have some fun and still have at least some tokage if you don't totally fuck it up. :lol:


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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Sirius]
    #59371 - 06/17/08 12:15 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

i hear you bro


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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Offlinefantasy2reality
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #62624 - 06/20/08 07:22 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Been using this tea, except with quail poo, and I'll tell you what... I notice a difference in just the 2 weeks I have been using. I use this tea every other day just to allow enough to soak in the ground, then chase with some water. Seems to be working out pretty good so far.
I'll get the pics from before using, and now after using it and try to put them up.

Thanks for the hook up man.

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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #62642 - 06/20/08 08:51 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Congrats on the success I'm glad its working out for ya.
5 leaves for you (when i have 50 posts).
post pics soon!!!! :greenthumb:


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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #62708 - 06/20/08 10:37 PM (15 years, 9 months ago)

alright, I haven't had an opportunity to try this shit with cannabis yet

but here's some results

i've been feeding brown sugar to a tree i've been growing, this tree is sitting in a pot, and hasn't really grown much more than a few inches in the last year or so

the last week i've been feeding this shit large amounts of brown sugar, i've probably given it between 5 to 10 tablespoons, I don't know exactly, i've just been pouring it on

I'd say it's grown in mass about 45%, and has increased it's space about 30%

meaning, it's branches have grown about a third of what they were longer and the leaves and extra branching along with that probably make up a 45% increase in growth

so total this thing has almost doubled it's growth by one half in a week, no nitrogen burning is apparent although don't take that too far because this tree seems to able to handle a lot of fertilizer with little nitrogen burning

all in all though this is massive results

i'd say this shit works like a fucking charm

i'd give it a shot, i wish i had pictures

but i don't

maybe in the future i'll take some pictures so you can have some results

in the meantime thanks a lot

peace


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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OfflineSirius
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #62875 - 06/21/08 04:16 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

Quote:

Iamasmoker said:
i've been feeding brown sugar to a tree i've been growing, this tree is sitting in a pot, and hasn't really grown much more than a few inches in the last year or so




And what kind of watering and feeding regimen has it been on in the last year or so? :strokebeard:


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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Sirius]
    #62881 - 06/21/08 05:52 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

well to tell you truth, once or twice a week, a water it, and feed it anywhere between 5 and 15 drops of miracle grow. I'm not saying it can't grow well, I'm just saying that in a pot it seems limited, adding the brown sugar seems to have accelerated it's growth beyond the potential it had in that pot/with the sugar added, I don't think it could tell the difference between how much root space to growth ratio it could perform.

that shit works!

the only other instance i've seen of some super rapid growth was when i added a bunch of rotting vegetables to the soil of this other plant, it composted so quickly the plant got a rush of nutrients and did the same thing, it grew like half it's size plus in a week sitting in a pot it hadn't grown more then a few inches difference in 2 or 3 years.

the problem with these things is i don't want to burn the plants or cause rotting.

otherwise i'd just dump miracle grow or dead compost or spoonfuls of sugar into these plants. I'm really not against superman growing my plants :lol:



anyway, if you're going to use sugar with your plants, you should see a big difference, from what i've seen, here's a basic estimate of what i'd give my plants, just an estimate from what i've seen with the smaller and larger plants. some extra nitrogen burning or rotting can occur, so try it like this

for every foot of plant you have add a tablespoon of sugar in your water every time you water. for example, 2 foot plant, use 2 tablespoons, for a 3 foot plant, use 3 tablespoons. for plants under a foot use a 12th of a tablespoon of sugar every time you water, for example, for a 3 inch plant, use 3 12ths of a tablespoon of sugar everytime you water, for a 7 inch plant, use 7 twelvths of a tablespoon. I'm going to try it like that with these baby juicy fruit seeds my freind gave me that just sprouted, hopefully it works out.

so far i've only seen minor burning with high doses and a puke rotting smell in the soil that i had compost in, the plants seem really resilient to sugar, so so far i don't see a problem with using it.

let me know


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #64389 - 06/23/08 02:12 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

thats really cool i had no idea, but i probably could have made an educated guess for sugars success.
im glad this thread helped your grows substantially;)


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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Phish_Dude]
    #64394 - 06/23/08 02:21 AM (15 years, 9 months ago)

yeah

let's see how it does with my OTHER plants


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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OfflineIamasmoker
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #67388 - 06/27/08 10:54 AM (15 years, 8 months ago)

once again i just want to give props to this information

i had another tree, a ficus that got destroyed by whitefly, for the past 6 months it's lower branches have had no leaves, and it hasn't wanted to grow them back

i used 2 tablespoons one each time the first 2 times i watered trying brown sugar. it didn't do much so i added 7 tablespoons the last time, after a week, i thought it wasn't going to do anything. 10 days later, i went out there today, the plants bottom leaves have all grown back with new branching areas, and the plant has gotten leafy and really bushy, i'd say it's grown a total 30%-35%.

so that's another plant i'm growing that just got big as fuck thanks to the excess of sugars i've been adding. and this isn't even with molasses which has the b-vitamins. thanks for the info!

hopefully everyone will be using molasses in their grows soon and we can all see the results:thumbup:


--------------------
my rating of flavoraid:

b*tch*s shouldn't call me a retard..

and this shit... "I like to drink tea, lift weights, punch shit, have sex with girls"....

is gay as f**k

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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Iamasmoker]
    #68828 - 06/30/08 01:54 AM (15 years, 8 months ago)

np, pot always seemed to be a sweet tooth:grin:


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Offlinefantasy2reality
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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #77109 - 07/09/08 07:40 PM (15 years, 8 months ago)

Quote:

fantasy2reality said:
Now, after mixing all the ingredients... do I feed all in one watering? or spread it out throughout the course of the week?

I'm new to growing MJ, so please be patient. I just took some photo's of my best plant so far... I have three different locations within 50 square yards of each other.. one location has three plants, one has two, and the other has one plant.

Don't know why it worked out that way, but it did.
I'm hoping I get at least two females.
But I am new to the whole thing, and just trying to learn as I go.

I do have fish emulsion made by Bonide, I also have MG bloom booster for when the time comes. I already made the molasses tea, I used quail shit.... is this okay? I raise quail, and a friend told me that as long as I let it sun and dry, that it would be cool...
Thanks for all your help for a beginner... I'm hoping to harvest some decent stuff to have for the year. I don't smoke that often so a little bit will last me forever.












Here's an update for you guys on my use of the molasses juice I've been using since finding this information on this excellent website!!!

Just discovered it's a girl today, two big bright white fluffy hairs sticking out from the base of the stem and branches!!! LUCKY ME! the picture with my hand you can kind of make the hairs out, sorry so blurry.




I wanted to ask you guys about this picture too... sorry to butt into your post phish...

Whats up with the 9 leaves on this plant? is this usual? does it mean anything? a friend told me it was normal, and that maybe the plant had mutated?????

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Invisiblecoda


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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #77114 - 07/09/08 07:42 PM (15 years, 8 months ago)

it's not a mutation, so no worries!  Things are looking good :smile:


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MFDoom666: sobriety kills my buzz every time.

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OfflineEleutherios

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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #78023 - 07/10/08 10:22 AM (15 years, 8 months ago)

Quote:

fantasy2reality said:
I used quail shit.... is this okay? I raise quail, and a friend told me that as long as I let it sun and dry, that it would be cool...





Look into ratios for using chicken shit. I would imagine that the amount used would be the same.


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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Eleutherios]
    #78144 - 07/10/08 12:40 PM (15 years, 8 months ago)

Quote:

Eleutherios said:
Quote:

fantasy2reality said:
I used quail shit.... is this okay? I raise quail, and a friend told me that as long as I let it sun and dry, that it would be cool...





Look into ratios for using chicken shit. I would imagine that the amount used would be the same.




Been using quail poo at about 2 TBS. per gallon of water. Seems to be alright. no yellow leaves, plants healthy.

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OfflineEleutherios

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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: fantasy2reality]
    #78866 - 07/10/08 09:51 PM (15 years, 8 months ago)

As far as the concept of feeding the soil goes, I wonder if it might be beneficial to mix a pot of different organic fertilizers. Then pour in some nice molasses broth, pour it in, and leave the soil to condition for a couple weeks prior to planting a rooted cutting for flowering. I was reading that because of the time span of the plant being in the media vs the time required for appropriate breakdown and activation of nutrients, certain things may be slightly limited in their usefulness. If you were to create a rich active media for the plant prior to planting, I think it wouldn't be an issue. Microbial life and beneficial fungi are where its at.


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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: Eleutherios]
    #85752 - 07/16/08 11:09 PM (15 years, 8 months ago)

Quote:

Eleutherios said:
As far as the concept of feeding the soil goes, I wonder if it might be beneficial to mix a pot of different organic fertilizers. Then pour in some nice molasses broth, pour it in, and leave the soil to condition for a couple weeks prior to planting a rooted cutting for flowering. I was reading that because of the time span of the plant being in the media vs the time required for appropriate breakdown and activation of nutrients, certain things may be slightly limited in their usefulness. If you were to create a rich active media for the plant prior to planting, I think it wouldn't be an issue. Microbial life and beneficial fungi are where its at.



yes if you use dry ingredients with your soil such as bone/blood meal you want to mix it in with soil a week or two in advance to stabilize the Ph, your plants may get burned otherwise. and with the addition of molasses letting it sit a week will be good because the organism  levels will start to thrive (depending on temp) and start to break down the dry ferts.


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Offlineimpgl

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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: erb]
    #101798 - 08/03/08 02:10 PM (15 years, 7 months ago)

Quote:

erb said:
Rock hard ride free!






i heard that using something like that flowering chem fert (the one from wal mart) would kill all of the microorganisms living in the soil.  also, that if you don't let your tap water sit for an hour or so for all of the chlorine to evaporate, that also kills your rhizosphere. any truth to it?


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OfflineEleutherios


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Re: the ultimate organic nutrient: molasses [Re: impgl]
    #104204 - 08/06/08 10:47 AM (15 years, 7 months ago)

Chemical Fertilizers are supposed to be bad for micro organisms and fed at a high enough rate, earthworms as well.


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