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dutchman
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Yeah, Googling indicates that Fosetyl is the active in the brand-name product Aliette. But Dutchman, I thought you said Aliette was one of the products the all the shops in the Netherlands were testing for and refused to carry?
Uh-uh. But there are a billion-and-one fungal treatments out there. Many don't seem to be intended for RDWC use, which is a shame, 'cause that's how I roll... but anyway. At this point, I think we've got a *lot* of potential products and combos that might be effective, but we're short on experimental data. My clones are running a little behind schedule, but I'll be able to start them soon. I'm a little ocupado tonight, but soon I'd like to perhaps compose a succinct list of the products we might deploy, and then outline some specific strategies so that everyone can compare notes in a halfway orderly fashion. Whatcha' thinkBL, have you also seen/heard of "No Fungus" from Greenway? Same company that makes "no Powder Mildew" and "No Spider Mites". Their product says:
16 Gallon Concentrate- No Fungus™ 16 gallon Concentrate is perfect for larger gardens and a great value. No Fungus™ is perfect for attacking your downey mildew, fusarium, anthracnose, phytophora, wiltering disease on your garden.
Fair enough... have you known Aliette to be successful in battling fusarium, pythium, etc?Not for Aliette esp. but for fungicide threats in general. Aliette / Fosetyl is a minor poisonous fungicide and since you had a quite open approach to use chemical fungicides I told you....But people here also dislike Aliette for use in cannabis, right. But there is a long way from Aliette to other chemical systemic shite against fungus.
BL, have you also seen/heard of "No Fungus" from Greenway? Same company that makes "no Powder Mildew" and "No Spider Mites". Their product says:
16 Gallon Concentrate- No Fungus™ 16 gallon Concentrate is perfect for larger gardens and a great value. No Fungus™ is perfect for attacking your downey mildew, fusarium, anthracnose, phytophora, wiltering disease on your garden.
Fair enough... have you known Aliette to be successful in battling fusarium, pythium, etc?
Half-alive and a very modest harvest... yeah, that about sums it up. :hungover: But the lab did verify that my root samples were growing out both fusarium and pythium, so... if I can find success against them, especially without systemics, hopefully it can be of use to others as well. Time will tell...
I'd like to perhaps compose a succinct list of the products we might deploy, and then outline some specific strategies so that everyone can compare notes in a halfway orderly fashion. Whatcha' think
Do you know what the ingredients are?
The label says Organic Thymol 0.80% and 99.2% Other ingredients (don't you just love the labeling laws). Other ingredients listed are Water, Oleic Acid and Citric Acid. Their website says it's 100% organic.
So we don't know nothing......Are you trying it?
BTW: a friend of a friend has plants with the same problems as yours and the other plant in the other thread and has successfully tested Aliette. After some days the plant begins to recover and massive root development started! Only THEN the plants can take up nutrients but only a little bit. And then, with healthy roots they are able to fight other fungi and bacteria that infects them because of weakness.
Correct, we know nothing about it. No, I've not tried this, I just came across the bottle at a store last week and put it up as another product that claims to be effective against fusarium..
Your welcome. If you use Aliette, two times watering your plants with it should show results.
If not, drop it.
There are many attempts with natural fungicides and I am a bit sceptical. But what worked somehow was spraying neem - to my surprise, but only with less nasty fungi.
I got the same problem now and I definetely got it from commercial seeds of AK 47 I bought in a shop. .
The zone will totally kill the bennies in Root Shield. Not sure what the Subdue is.
There's a distinct line in the sand here,... sterile on one side,and live on the other. You can't effectively combine the two. You need to choose one route or the other.
Grow well,
B.B.
Man I was just reading somewhere about how plants communicate with each other through chemical signals sent through the the root zone as well as through the air. If a plant is being attacked, it will send a signal to alert the plants in the area. This alert will in turn cause the plants to exude certain foods that are known to attract specific bacteria, the same bacteria that fight off whatever infection is attacking the plant that is alerting the others.
Trippy shit that none of us really fully understand yet. Apparently mycorrhizae are also responsible for facilitating the communication through the underground network of roots.
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