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Inoculation techniques during flowering cycle?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Glomus
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Inoculation techniques during flowering cycle?

Glomus 31 Replies 3,250 Views
Page 2 of 2 · Replies 21–32 of 32
Well these blends have been formulated to be symbiotic with each other, but thats an interesting point to bring up as I tend to avoid introducing inoculation after propagation and transplant for that exact reason, so I don't disrupt the balance of the soil biome.
I just feel like the single strains don't work as well, also quality control and shelf life issues.
Take a look at raw bloom microbes or fish shit microbes… i like those for soil/soiless
 
Take a look at raw bloom microbes or fish shit microbes… i like those for soil/soiless
Definitely, I just recently found the raw bloom microbes recently and it seems they are the only ones doing this. I'm not sure how dialed that is versus gimmick, It would be cool to have a break down of why their bloom microbe blend is better during flowering.

Big big fan of fish hydrolysate, mainly to feed whatever is already thriving the soil
 
I would like to see more competition in this area of cannabis. It seems like its getting there but lots of marketing going too.
 
I'm gona do some more digging into each microbe they have in that raw bloom microbe blend.
They claim it rescues the plant form stress but I'm not sure if thats exactly what you want, sometimes stress at the end of flower can be a good thing.
 
I'm gona do some more digging into each microbe they have in that raw bloom microbe blend.
They claim it rescues the plant form stress but I'm not sure if thats exactly what you want, sometimes stress at the end of flower can be a good thing.
Can always induce other stressors like drought and pruning
 
Yeah I like to see yellowing by the end, seems like a healthy progression to me. I feel like when the plant draws nutes from itself its cleaner and more natural. Just a theory.
Well there are plusses and minuses imo.. really depends on the goals and the individual grow… imo always stick with what works for you
 
Seems like a lot of protective strains which i'm not so sure about as they secrete anti biotic and anti fungal properties which may be harming pathogens or perhaps beneficials too, not sure on that. The interesting ones in there are the pseudomonas strains. I think some of those strains have the most promise for cannabis cultivation.
 
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These guys up in Humbolt are doing some R&D on a strain called rhodo pseudomonas palutris.
They say so far the research is saying 9% increase in yields with this inoculation alone.
 
Well there are plusses and minuses imo.. really depends on the goals and the individual grow… imo always stick with what works for you
Sometimes we try to replicate what has worked in the past and don't always get it right lol.
 
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