Elephant Man
"MAD SCIENTIST"
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2006
- Messages
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Runbyhemp said:Sorry to hear of your pain E Man. You have my best wishes
Thanks mang.
Found this tea on the net and I haven't tried it yet but I like it...:aok:
http://journeytoforever.org/garden_bugjuice.html
[FONT=Times New Roman,Georgia,Times]Milly's Bug Juice[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman,Georgia,Times]The Bug Juice Formula[/FONT]
- [FONT=Times New Roman,Georgia,Times]One 5 gallon bucket
Corn starch
Bread yeast
Milly's MaxGro fishmeal (or use fish emulsion plus liquid seaweed emulsion)
Ripe fruit, such as plums, apples, apricots, peaches, pears, watermelon, peeled bananas -- no citrus.[/FONT]
[FONT=Times New Roman,Georgia,Times]Yeast: Mix two teaspoons of dry baker's yeast, two teaspoons of sugar and one teaspoon of bread flour to 2 cups of warm water. Keep warm. It releases CO2, mix the solution to reduce the foam. Keep doing this until the mixture stops foaming. This means the sugar has been consumed. Add two tablespoons of cornstarch, or potato starch, 1 tablespoon of flour (a protein and nutrient source for the yeast) and allow the mixture to remain warm (very important) for 2 or more hours. Overnight is optimal. Then put it in the bucket.
Fruit: Pit the fruit, and puree it to a mush so it can be more rapidly digested by microorganisms. Add 1 pound or so to the bucket. Decaying fruit is fine -- it is already being attacked by microorganisms so it doesn't hurt to include them.
Cornstarch: Add 5 tablespoons to the bucket.
MaxGro: Add 10 tablespoons MaxGro (or fish emulsion plus liquid seaweed emulsion) to the bucket.
Fill the bucket with water to a few inches from the top and mix well. Add a handful of compost or the soil from around the root zone of a nicely growing plant (don't use surface soil). Place the bucket in the sun and put a piece of cheesecloth over it to keep flies away. Stir often. Don't fill the bucket up to the top.
After a week, start applying the mixture to your plants. It is best placed near the roots when transplanting (it prevents transplant shock). Otherwise, pour the Bug Juice into the soil around the plants. After it is absorbed, water extensively in order to get all the bugs and nutrients into the soil. They won't do any good if they remain on the surface. Apply 1 cup to 1 gallon of Bug Juice to each plant. Only trees and large plants require 1 gallon.
Dr. Stephen Martin
Milly's Gourmet Organics
Mailing list email: [email protected]
[/FONT]
MMMMMM....good.
I would add High P guano and cut the fish poo in half in flower.