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Brewing the tea a day before you use it with molasses and worm castings is the way to go.
The foliar pack can be combined with the root pack with no loss of population of either pack.
Best to use weekly tea, and use it fresh.
Microbes on the leaf surface will stay alive for up to a week.
Works with synthetic or organic programs.
If using synthetics, use 20ml/gal in your tea of molasses to give them a food source. You may want to apply the molasses as a top dress mid week as well.
If the spores are active they can infect host faster. If we are keeping a constant supply of diverse microbes by being consistent with the applications, the product will be effective.
With foliar spraying, it is best to apply in the evening when RH is at a maximum. Above 60 is best.
I think we may be overthinking it a little. I am told the tea is more effective by the man who cultures the microbes for me. He has no reason to misinform me. My humble opinion is that a 24 hour brew will only be bacteria dominant if there were more bacteria spores to begin with. Since the foliar pack is fungi dominant as it is, I don't see it going bacteria dominant in 24 hours, or ever for that matter, even with the root pack added. The microbes in the packs are meant to coexist. They are all compatible. Given a food source and O2 there is no reason why they can't all get along and grow together.
If you are still worried about it, make foliar tea separately.
The foliar pack can be combined with the root pack with no loss of population of either pack.
Best to use weekly tea, and use it fresh.
Microbes on the leaf surface will stay alive for up to a week.
Works with synthetic or organic programs.
If using synthetics, use 20ml/gal in your tea of molasses to give them a food source. You may want to apply the molasses as a top dress mid week as well.
If the spores are active they can infect host faster. If we are keeping a constant supply of diverse microbes by being consistent with the applications, the product will be effective.
With foliar spraying, it is best to apply in the evening when RH is at a maximum. Above 60 is best.
I think we may be overthinking it a little. I am told the tea is more effective by the man who cultures the microbes for me. He has no reason to misinform me. My humble opinion is that a 24 hour brew will only be bacteria dominant if there were more bacteria spores to begin with. Since the foliar pack is fungi dominant as it is, I don't see it going bacteria dominant in 24 hours, or ever for that matter, even with the root pack added. The microbes in the packs are meant to coexist. They are all compatible. Given a food source and O2 there is no reason why they can't all get along and grow together.
If you are still worried about it, make foliar tea separately.
I've been wondering the same. I have not wanted to post about it, as this is unsubstantiated, but I've been getting the feeling that using the foliar pack directly may be more effective than using it in a tea that becomes bacterially-dominant.
If the purpose of the tea is to awaken the spores before application, what is the advantage of this rather than letting them lie dormant in the grow medium until the conditions there suit them? Won't spores be effective longer if they're not forced to activate prematurely, then most likely die?
If anyone has quantitative information here, I'd be very interested.