Re: Chili Concentrate

Bargyla Rateaver (brateaver@earthlink.net)
Thu, 27 May 1999 21:12:34 -0700

Don't know if I am repeating myself here, but the real facts about insect attraction were summed up by Dr. Phil Callahan long ago, and since corroborated. It is always the nutrition of the plant that makes the difference. The plant sends out a message to the insect, and that is done by electromagnetic spectrum wavelengths. That is so clearly the truth, and I made it a very strong point to include the data in the Primer UPDATE and even in the Primer BASICS.
What really makes the difference it seems is usually the trace minerals. That is why using seaweed gives so much strength to the plant--every possible trace mineral the plant can use is there, and the proportions have to be perfect for plants, because seaweed is itself a plant--is the only "fertilizer" that has the perfect proportions just because it is a plant and can have absolutely anything it could possibly want, being in the ocean.

Mr. Chapman's mycorrhizae are just smart enough to go thru the soil hunting for all such minerals and any other molecules of importance for growth. If you give the soil the advantage of seaweed too, the mycorrhizae can really have a ball.

That is one reason, I think, why my Enzoom mix gives such startling results, sometimes, because it is made by growing harmless bacteria in a seaweed solution, then killing them without heat, so they break up and release into the seaweed solution all the amino acids, proteins, sugars, CHOs, etc etc, but also the minerals that had already been found useful by the bacteria and utilized for their own growth.
When you add the benefits of the mycorrhizal searches for every tiny last bit of nutrients, you get the real boost to growth.

So,. thanks again, Mr. Chapman, for sending me those 2 superhappy tomato plants.

Douglas M. Hinds wrote:

> Hello,
>
> >the addition of the borax worked, aphids disappeared, which led me to assume a boron
> >deficiency, ...as main attractant for bugs
>
> You are implying that the neither the Hot Chili Pepper nor the Garlic present in the solution applied were significant contributing factors to the aphids' disappearance? It would be interesting (and important) to verify this by doing another series of tests with more controls. What are the possibilities of doing that on your end (in deference to the antecedents you already have behind you)? Or perhaps there are others receiving this that may be better positioned to do this sooner. A soil analysis to determine the existence of a boron (or other micronutrient) deficiency would also help correlate your supposition (which I have no quarrel with - my interest is in corroborating it).
>
> D H
>
> *********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
>
> On 27/05/99 at 9:17 AM Argall Family wrote:
>
> >I have in the past combined chili, pepper, garlic, clay, without real
> >benefit, until I added a very small amount of borax, in the opinion of an
> >entomologist scarcely enough to annoy ants working aphids. But the addition
> >of the borax worked, aphids disappeared, which led me to assume a boron
> >deficiency, quite likely in our wet environment. I tend to come back to
> >suspecting soil deficiency as main attractant for bugs, and the need to work
> >on nutrition while getting rid of the immediate problem.
> >
> >Dennis
> >
> >
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> Douglas M. Hinds
> Centro para el Desarrollo Comunitario y Rural, A.C. (CeDeCoR)
> (Center for Community and Rural Development)
> Petronilo Lopez No. 73
> Cd. Guzman, Jalisco 49000 MEXICO
> e-mail: dmhinds@acnet.net, cedecor@acnet.net, cedecor@ipnet.com.mx
>
>
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