Milk Fertlizer
Milk is a good source of calcium, not only for humans, but for plants as well. Raw, or unpasteurized, cow’s milk has some of the same nourishing properties for plants that it has for animals and people. It contains beneficial proteins, vitamin B, sugars, fungi and beneficial bacteria that are good for plants, improving their overall health and crop yields. The microbes that feed on the fertilizer components of milk are also beneficial to the soil.
Milk iv noticed is a 6.5 - 6.7 PH, Values higher than 6.7 denote mastitic milk and values below pH 6.5 denote the presence of colostrum or bacterial deterioration. Because milk is a buffer solution, considerable acid development may occur before the pH changes.
Milk is a research-proven fungicide and soft bodied insecticide - insects have no pancreas to digest the milk sugars. Dr. Wagner Bettiol, a Brazilian research scientist, found that milk was effective in the treatment of powdery mildew on zucchini. His research was subsequently replicated by New Zealand melon growers who tested it against the leading commercially available chemical fungicide and found that milk out-performed everything else. To their surprise, they also found that the milk worked as a foliar fertilizer, producing larger and tastier melons than the control group.
As for mixing the milk with water for anyone whos gonna try it id start with 20%. They say u can give it to the plant straight and as i said above its a nutural PH level. And the obvious things like the milk smelling. Since it improves yielding, would be when ur using most i guess u could us it as feed a couple week before flushing. In foilar feeding when its diluted, i doubt smell will be an issue
Hope some trys this as well as me and better still get a good result