canna woop!
Member
What's super thrive? I know there is some naa in there, but what do they add? A. Secret form of potassium?
Weezard, I like your Times New Roman font. I think it's supposed to be easier to read or remember than Arial font which seems to be the IC Mag default font.I'm just setting up to do an an aspirin/no aspirin, side by side on some seedlings.
It gets touted because of the aggressive nature of willow roots.
That made little sense to me.
Willow roots are quite aggressive, and do produce salicylic acid, that's true.
However, if it is a root stimulant, would it not "stimulate" growth of the competition roots?
Most plants generate compounds that impede root growth in competing plants.
Compounds that they, and their siblings are unaffected by.
It's a survival strategy.
All that said.
Cut flowers do seem to last longer with aspirin.
I have noticed that it does not cause them to grow roots.
So, is it of any use to med. farmers?
V shell C.
Weeze
I'm just setting up to do an an aspirin/no aspirin, side by side on some seedlings.
It gets touted because of the aggressive nature of willow roots.
That made little sense to me.
Willow roots are quite aggressive, and do produce salicylic acid, that's true.
However, if it is a root stimulant, would it not "stimulate" growth of the competition roots?
Most plants generate compounds that impede root growth in competing plants.
Compounds that they, and their siblings are unaffected by.
It's a survival strategy.
All that said.
Cut flowers do seem to last longer with aspirin.
I have noticed that it does not cause them to grow roots.
So, is it of any use to med. farmers?
V shell C.
Weeze
Here's What Makes This Product Packaging Stand Out
Notice on the front cover how the package uses the following techniques...
1.1. A very bold headline
"#1 Extra Life"
2.2. Very powerful words
"World Champion", "Greatest Guarantee", "Proof", "Vitamins-Hormones", "Science Miracle."
3.3. Bold colors
Bright yellow, red, and green.
4.4. A variety of large fonts
5.5. Photos of healthy plants and trees
And Did You Take a Look at the Back of the Package?
If you examined the back of the Superthrive package you would have noticed that it's as compelling as the front of the package, but in a different way.
There's no bright colors or photos.
It's all text.
But the text is very compelling.
On most bottles of something, the back is filled with cautions, directions, and ingredients.
The back of Superthrive is filled with additional sales copy. Notice how the back says, "EXTRA LIFE for YOUR..." and it lists 10 different things to which Superthrive provides extra life.
Basically the front of this package gives you all the emotional reasons for buying and the back gives you a lot of logical reasons for buying.
It's no wonder that Superthrive has taken the fertilizer world by storm (even though they don't claim to be a fertilizer).
LOL the Barnum Effect in full swing... Here's what something looks like that really works:It is considered a textbook example of a type of marketing practice.
Has been promoted to most gardening sectors at some time in its dubious history , very few brought a second bottle.
It survives as a cheap point of sale impulse buy , promiseing an easy fix for numerous growroom deficiencies with little effort , and a 200 % profit margin to the shop.
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It is trademarked but not patented , anyone could reverse engineer and bring out a competitor by another name like Megathrive , but none have bothered.
It tastes sweet , if sugars then not a good idea in a bubble cloner for risk of mould.
Seventy odd years and I can find no credible side by side that suggests it works.
Have used it for several problems with no noticeable effect , from sickly canna and show plants to ten acres of grass seed on the farm in the 70,s, and I consider it of no value , and money wasted on false advertising.
About 30 years ago, I saw a Qt bottle of Superthrive. That gives them even more room for fine print and claims with eccentric wording. I took the time to read it, and it was entertaining. It is mainly Vit. B-1 and NAA, which is a hormone found in many rooting hormones like Vita Grow, Dip N Grow, others along with the main one Indole 3 butyric acid. BTW, contrary to what many think, it is NOT organic. -granger
By Robert Cox, Horticulture Agent, Colorado State University Cooperative Extension
Many consumers assume that products on the store shelf must have been tested to prove their claims. Certainly, fertilizers have to meet nutrient content requirements, and pesticides are rigorously tested for safety before EPA registration.
For some other garden products, however, no such testing is required before sale to the public.
A good example is vitamin B1 (thiamine), often sold to "prevent transplant shock" and "stimulate new root growth" when planting trees, shrubs, roses and other plants. A study in the 1930's provided the basis for such claims. Pea roots cut off from the plant were placed in a culture medium in the laboratory.
The researchers knew that thiamine was normally found in roots, so they put thiamine in the culture medium and found that root growth did occur. Vitamin B1 is manufactured in 0lant leaves and sent to the roots, but if roots are cut off and placed in a petri plate, vitamin B1 stimulates growth of the roots when it saturates the culture medium.
Planting trees in a soil environment, however, is vastly different from a laboratory culture. Most important, gardeners aren't in the habit of cutting off the root system when planting. Several studies using intact mums, apple trees, orange trees, pine, tomato, beans, pepper, corn, pear, watermelon and squash have failed to demonstrate that vitamin B1 treatments provide any type of growth response.
Some "root stimulator" products contain a rooting hormone and fertilizer along with vitamin B1. These materials may increase rooting and growth, not the vitamin B1.
The bottom line: While root stimulator products are not necessary for transplant success, if you do use one, make sure it contains a rooting hormone and fertilizer rather than just vitamin B1. The vitamin B1 is for marketing purposes rather than actual effect.
IS IT ORGANIC?
SUPERthrive is non-toxic, while it is natural, it cannot be certified as organic because some of the ingredients are made synthetically. In order to label a product as organic, all ingredients must follow OMRI guidelines.
I don't know about Superthrive but many synthetic B vitamins are derived from coal tar, even the ones people take. I'm a hydro guy myself but I don't like any known to be harmful or questionable substances getting exposed to my plants which I myself am later exposed to. Having organic certification or 100% sources verified from organics helps.what isn't organic about it?
One study noted 1,360 mg of willow bark has 240 mg salicin (the natural ingredient relatively compared with 50-100 mg acetyl derivative of salicylic acid, the active ingredient in aspirin). So that's 5.67 times the aspirin dose in mg of willow bark - yeah pretty close - willow bark is naturally concentrated!Check out Mountain Rose Herbs - for the willow bark powder. Like the aspirin, it doesn't take very much to be effective.
dank.Frank