Soil Preparation and Analysis
|
Subject: molasses how to apply
|
|
From
|
Location
|
Message
|
Date Posted
|
kountry girl |
|
hi, how do you apply molasses to your patch? all the ones I have ever seen are really thick.thanks!
|
4/29/2007 12:26:28 PM
|
LiLPatch |
Dummer Twp - Ontario
|
Dilute in warm water and mix in with foliar feeding or with water barrel and compost teas
|
4/29/2007 3:51:29 PM
|
Tremor |
Ctpumpkin@optonline.net
|
Mix 1 oz per gallon of water. It might help to warm it first. Spray it on everything a couple times a week to keep bacteria levels up. This is supposed to also raise the brix levels of the targeted plants which may increase disease & insect resistance.
|
4/29/2007 4:31:42 PM
|
WiZZy |
President - GPC
|
4 OZ, in warm water spray 2 weeks into soil 1/2 inch deep to feed the microbes...Whole patch
|
5/1/2007 8:59:17 AM
|
Drew Papez apapez@sympatico.ca |
Ontario
|
Don't spray on foiliar use ground application only. Anyone familiar with agro k knows that molasses creates a film on the leaves and clogs the pores of the leaf making it unable to breathe.
Drew
|
5/1/2007 2:28:33 PM
|
Tremor |
Ctpumpkin@optonline.net
|
I wouldn't spray the plants with 4 oz.
|
5/2/2007 12:28:17 AM
|
WiZZy |
President - GPC
|
I agree, I only go with molasses in the soil, 4 weeks and 2 weeks prior to planting, whole patch, feed them microbes......then once a week around the stump at 1oz per gal, that may change this year with the aerobic compost tea taking its place.
|
5/2/2007 10:09:08 AM
|
burrhead gonna grow a slunger |
Mill Creek West by god Virginia
|
i spray molasses mixed with fish 2 teaspoons full to two gallons of water for each plant, every other day spray foliar style and since ive started this my plants have never been healthier and they keep a awsome green color just my experience burrhead
|
5/2/2007 5:21:00 PM
|
Green Elephant |
Woodinville, WA, PNW zn 7b
|
You can take it one step further by using your expensive molasses to make compost tea. A few oz of molasses in a five gallon bucket, a handul of well-rotted compost as a starter in a mesh bag. A source for areation. And 24 hours later you have 5 gals of trillions of beneficial microbes with which to innoculate your soil. You can use this as a folar or soil surface treatment.
|
11/12/2007 8:01:34 PM
|
Total Posts: 9 |
Current Server Time: 11/25/2024 7:44:16 AM |