MaddHacker
Well-Known Member
What's up with all the Candida all the sudden... Must be something in the water.. Gonna have to do some reading I guess Damn it... LMAO
How To Use Progressive Web App aka PWA On 420 Magazine Forum
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Preach that low P farside! Thanks for the link and the info.
For anyone wanting the info in the link without clicking it, it says:
- Phosphates, both available and unavailable forms, do not kill mycorrhizal fungi.
- High levels of available soil phosphate (soluble phosphates) result in reduced root colonization by mycorrhizal fungi.
- Insoluble phosphate does not affect mycorrhizal development. The insoluble phosphate in natural soils can represent as much as 99% of the soil’s total phosphate content.
Depends on what you're using cannabis for really. More and more are finding that the anti-anxiety effects of CBD are quite helpful, along with the anti-inflammatory effect (taken internally, over time rather than instant), and the brain health benefits. Not to mention its role in seizure control among epileptics, and the list goes on. Once they start doing more research on it, they will discover many many more ways that CBD does a body good. And Candida is practically pure CBD. My EVOO oil tested out at 10.5mg/ml with less than 0.5mg/ml THC.What's up with all the Candida all the sudden... Must be something in the water.. Gonna have to do some reading I guess Damn it... LMAO
Hmm...that's not how I read it. But you probably read it more carefully than I did! I read it as the plant only can use mykos in environments with low soluble phosphates. And that mkos will convert insoluble phosphates to soluble and make it available to the roots. "But when soluble phosphates are abundant, the host plants tend to increase their restrictions to mycorrhizal fungi, resulting in lower levels of root colonization. So avoid applying high levels of soluble phosphates at the same time that you apply mycorrhizal fungi. Instead, consider reducing your total phosphate fertility, and spread your phosphate applications out more broadly. "The interesting point to me was that mycorrhizae increases phosphate uptake, and then the plant limits mycorrhizal interaction in high phosphate environments. So if i "get it" the plant really uses mycos to regulate it's P uptake. In low P environments it allows more myco interaction to assist in it's P uptake, and conversely in high P environments.
Based on the bud analysis charts in my noflushclub link #1, there is a heck of a lot more nitrogen and potassium in the buds at harvest than phosphorus. Here's an example of one plant:And root colonization isn't very important in late bloom, which is probably why it's recommended to push it at that stage.
That's useful info for HB, too ... a lotta P in our cation drench ...
That's the breakfast bar. The shed floor is plywood .Tid Bits all over the floor in the shed... What a mess!
It's always tidy in my garden!Time to clean up and start the weekend.
Hmm...that's not how I read it. But you probably read it more carefully than I did! I read it as the plant only can use mykos in environments with low soluble phosphates. And that mkos will convert insoluble phosphates to soluble and make it available to the roots. "But when soluble phosphates are abundant, the host plants tend to increase their restrictions to mycorrhizal fungi, resulting in lower levels of root colonization. So avoid applying high levels of soluble phosphates at the same time that you apply mycorrhizal fungi. Instead, consider reducing your total phosphate fertility, and spread your phosphate applications out more broadly. "
I read that as mykos has the ability to turn insoluble to soluble phosphate, allowing the plant to uptake it. But that's just my reading and I have no real idea!
We don't care for high P either, which is why we are using MegaCrop .