Hi again Microbeman,
There is a lot of potential for damage with this stuff folks, be careful.
I run an organic grow. It does not involve ingredients that can hurt you.
Hi again Microbeman,
There is a lot of potential for damage with this stuff folks, be careful.
I am 3000 miles away from those test results but they were conclusive. Doubt if you will, I encourage doubt almost as much as I encourage your own follow up testing instead of blindly following.
The science is this Blowtrees. The biology of soil, this circle of life happens at a rate as things live and die at an activity rate that can be measured as humus is produced. Certain factors at our command dictate the rate at which that cycle occurs. Oxygen content is definitely one of the most if not THE most important factor in this equation. Not much difference existed between my neighbors soil composition and my own prior to the influences we imposed separately on them, and we have the same water source etc (creek). I am not saying that there is NO room for outside influences skewing test results etc, the factors leading to the results of the testing were nowhere near as controlled as some of the previous experiments I have briefly outlined. Still, my friend was just as sure as some of you seem to be that my soil micro-life was dead due to these practices. What i AM saying here is that for those of you stating blankly that H2O2 ruins soil micro life, well, you're full of crap and that's a fact.
Hey Maryjohn,
Try drinking a gallon of bat guano sludge and get back to me. The fact is that every single ingredient in your organic grow is potentially damaging.
Blowtrees,
I thought I already freed you from being full of shit but I guess not because you are still making statements of bottom lines etc that are just total BS. I have pointed to the tools necessary, target application rates, results of my own experiments and lab results that flatly prove wrong this thought of you guys that all use of H2O2 is counter to goals. I don't know how I can be any more clear, exact numbers are of no importance. I use the stuff, my neighbor doesn't, we both grow in giant containers. My soil tested for more than 3 times the amount of beneficial nematodes than his. So, while the average person reading this thread may believe your rhetoric, your crap don't fly with me because I know better. I have actually done the testing, seen the results from both the field and the lab, and because of this know for a fact that you are pulling your comments out of thin air. I know how this goes though, you will continue to spew lies on the subject without any clue, and I have better things to do than push rocks up hippie hill all day so I bid you farewell, good luck, and ask that you guys try to keep the BS to a minimum.
Minds I, Please refer to my webpage to see my common method of running tests www.microbeorganics.com . Colonies are bogus. Direct live microscopy is where its at. I would simply film what occurrs when a drop of diluted h2o2 is injected into a functioning microbial consortia in liquid and in slurry. Of course repeated. Unfortunately I'm under the gun to accomplish very much in a short period these days and cannot do it for some time.
"the difference between medicine and poison, is dose"
Hello all,
Why do folks add all kinds of stuff to their grows.
I will conceed that it is counter to intuiety but for me the results speak for themselves.
This is just my experience...
Keep in mind that "Good results stem from experience, not from the obedient application of divine methods dictated by a few infallible masters."
Do experiment.
minds_I
The most common form is 3% hydrogen peroxide. You can buy it at a drug store or supermarket. Because it has stabilizers in it to give it longer shelf life, it is not used for consumption. Some of the stabilizers are phenol, acetanilide, and phosphoric acid.
Cats get rid of feline leukemia and chlamydia and regain their energetic selves. Dogs get rid of distemper with H2O2.
Phenol, also known as carbolic acid, is a toxic, white crystalline solid with a sweet tarry odor, commonly referred to as a "hospital smell".
Good day to you Paz
well, I see your point but I am not going to go plant my own neem trees, harvest the nuts, and process them.
I don't believe my definition hinges on whether you prepare an additive yourself. Compare your own poop to worm poop and you will see what i mean. Sometimes it's best to leave it to others.
I found this interesting, from your second link
and also this one, which i must confessed raised an eyebrow:
I can promise you, you can do no such thing with h2o2, in dogs, cats, or any other animal.
from wiki: