G
Guest
Hi fellow growers,
I have just joined my first forum in the last few weeks. I've been outdoor and gorilla growing for many years and I finally joined to submit some outdoor reports, but I hope to engage other growers with info and topics that have I have learned or considered over the many years that i have never been able to discuss with anyone or hear countering opinions about. I would truly cherrish the opinions of others even if they are antithetical to mine.
The first topic Im hoping for engagement on is the topic of Mould
First, let me share my b ackground on this subject. Unlike perhaps any other grower on this web, I have been fighting mould all of my life. I grew up in big leaf burley tobacco country, the grandson of many generations of burley producers. By the time I was 6, I understood that mould could destroy my families lifestyle and farm.. That mould is blue mould and a dime size spot on a big burley leaf will turn the whole plant to mush in 48 hours,along with 75% of my families income. It is very similar in nature and effect to the dreaded Botryitis
When I first began the battle with mould, there were no forums to read and discuss what others were doing so I was pretty much isolated in my efforts. If there are other farm boys here, they will know that farmers live by chemicals and couldn't grow half of the crops we grow without them. Because we started our own tobacco seedlings in greenhouses and sold seedlings to other growers in the County, we were growing 250000 seedlings per year. We constantly fought damping off and other fungal diseases. We grew blackberries and plums also and thes e often suffered from powdery mldew and rust, black spot and other diseases.
Naturally, when my big colas began to mould, i turned to the products we were using on the farm to fight the mould that I was familar with there use. Several types of the fungicides we were using were non toxic but quite effective. I began to use them with very effective results.
Since I began monitoring the forums, Ive come to understand that others arent using these products. I read thread after thread of growers loosing thier plants to mould and from my experience mould is curable.
My Question: Am I the only person using these products? And if so, why? I truly believe there are no negtative side effects and several of them are recommended by the EPA for use around fish and are wholly non=toxic. Do you folks know something I don't. Please, tell me your thoughts and experiences.
Further, my first line of defense when i am growing a plant that is suceptable to mold is to affect the shape of the plant in an effort to address the conditions that add to the natural tendency of the plant to mould by eliminating density and improve sunlight penetration and air circulation.
I never top a plant that is suceptable as in my view this will only exacerbate the mould tendency as its effect is to thicken the plant. Thats the problem already to some extent and to act in a maner that will increase branching, and increase the density of the plant to me is logically counterproductive.
Another common practice i use is to tie the untopped plant horizontal to the ground and remove the branches that would be on the underneath side and leave only those top branches whose stature now is that of several individual plants on a horizontal stem, with each branch getting its own sunlight and are as if it were an individual plant. If this practice is done correctly, I don't feel it has that big of an impact on yeild.
I dont read of other growers engaging in such activities. Again, why. Do they only work for me? I hope that other growers who have been experimenting and dealing with this will provide me with your thoughts and experiences.
EDIT:I forgot this question. A few years ago i first read about salycin and its potential effect on mould. I experimented with the aspirin in the gallon of water and couldn't document any dicernable effect. Again, bieng raised on a farm, i know that plants abosrb different chemicals in different ways so i moved to salycin that was suspended in a vehicle that facilitated tissue absorbtion such as those used for morphine patches or birth control. I used a product called Aspercreme but there are many of these. I think the HEAD ON that is always advertised may be one. These aspirin product are designed to be absorbed and I have had real results from this approach. I think it may increase mould resistance by as much as 30%. My question is this: Because the aspirin seems to be systemic in nature, is it being replicated in the plant and is one smoking aspirin with every joint. As someone who remembers the old days of cholchicine treatments, this is a concern to me and I hope others will express their findings.
I have just joined my first forum in the last few weeks. I've been outdoor and gorilla growing for many years and I finally joined to submit some outdoor reports, but I hope to engage other growers with info and topics that have I have learned or considered over the many years that i have never been able to discuss with anyone or hear countering opinions about. I would truly cherrish the opinions of others even if they are antithetical to mine.
The first topic Im hoping for engagement on is the topic of Mould
First, let me share my b ackground on this subject. Unlike perhaps any other grower on this web, I have been fighting mould all of my life. I grew up in big leaf burley tobacco country, the grandson of many generations of burley producers. By the time I was 6, I understood that mould could destroy my families lifestyle and farm.. That mould is blue mould and a dime size spot on a big burley leaf will turn the whole plant to mush in 48 hours,along with 75% of my families income. It is very similar in nature and effect to the dreaded Botryitis
When I first began the battle with mould, there were no forums to read and discuss what others were doing so I was pretty much isolated in my efforts. If there are other farm boys here, they will know that farmers live by chemicals and couldn't grow half of the crops we grow without them. Because we started our own tobacco seedlings in greenhouses and sold seedlings to other growers in the County, we were growing 250000 seedlings per year. We constantly fought damping off and other fungal diseases. We grew blackberries and plums also and thes e often suffered from powdery mldew and rust, black spot and other diseases.
Naturally, when my big colas began to mould, i turned to the products we were using on the farm to fight the mould that I was familar with there use. Several types of the fungicides we were using were non toxic but quite effective. I began to use them with very effective results.
Since I began monitoring the forums, Ive come to understand that others arent using these products. I read thread after thread of growers loosing thier plants to mould and from my experience mould is curable.
My Question: Am I the only person using these products? And if so, why? I truly believe there are no negtative side effects and several of them are recommended by the EPA for use around fish and are wholly non=toxic. Do you folks know something I don't. Please, tell me your thoughts and experiences.
Further, my first line of defense when i am growing a plant that is suceptable to mold is to affect the shape of the plant in an effort to address the conditions that add to the natural tendency of the plant to mould by eliminating density and improve sunlight penetration and air circulation.
I never top a plant that is suceptable as in my view this will only exacerbate the mould tendency as its effect is to thicken the plant. Thats the problem already to some extent and to act in a maner that will increase branching, and increase the density of the plant to me is logically counterproductive.
Another common practice i use is to tie the untopped plant horizontal to the ground and remove the branches that would be on the underneath side and leave only those top branches whose stature now is that of several individual plants on a horizontal stem, with each branch getting its own sunlight and are as if it were an individual plant. If this practice is done correctly, I don't feel it has that big of an impact on yeild.
I dont read of other growers engaging in such activities. Again, why. Do they only work for me? I hope that other growers who have been experimenting and dealing with this will provide me with your thoughts and experiences.
EDIT:I forgot this question. A few years ago i first read about salycin and its potential effect on mould. I experimented with the aspirin in the gallon of water and couldn't document any dicernable effect. Again, bieng raised on a farm, i know that plants abosrb different chemicals in different ways so i moved to salycin that was suspended in a vehicle that facilitated tissue absorbtion such as those used for morphine patches or birth control. I used a product called Aspercreme but there are many of these. I think the HEAD ON that is always advertised may be one. These aspirin product are designed to be absorbed and I have had real results from this approach. I think it may increase mould resistance by as much as 30%. My question is this: Because the aspirin seems to be systemic in nature, is it being replicated in the plant and is one smoking aspirin with every joint. As someone who remembers the old days of cholchicine treatments, this is a concern to me and I hope others will express their findings.
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