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03-26-2009, 05:14 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Metro Manila
Age: 41
Posts: 297
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hi camille i dont know hb101 but i googled it at first i was sooo tempted so i searched everywhere but sadly we dont have this product... but there's this product that really works... orchids especially on phalenopsis (seedlings- cos ull see the result in just 2-3 days) anyway theres this seller who sold me erecto biozon... and it hails from indonesia.. so he instruct me to use 4 capsfull of this liquid fert in a gallon of water... and soaked the seedlings for 5 mins... and i did that what he told me.. and at some point i even use it to water all my orchids... after 2-3 days... the leaves just got bigger some just got twice the size or thrice maybe... and i have this rhyncostylis... (a bit stubborn on growing new roots) did make some new shoots now... so far no harmful effects. you can also use for waterplants together with fish or pearl shrimps.. my moss for feeding shrimp just got vegetative and growing on other rocks... so i guess theres magic on that product... anyway... i know its weird... but then again it works on me. anyway you can google it "erecto biozon" well the language use is bahasa indonesia so just use the google translate and just copy and paste the whole page... and everything well not all will convert to english
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02-28-2017, 04:04 PM
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Jr. Member
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Join Date: Feb 2017
Posts: 1
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Don't rule out HB-101 yet
Empiracle testing reserarch is a neat thing. You may not know the theory why if works. But IF shown it does there then is a reason to be discovered.
I'm a PhD level Biochemist w Botany background. I'm a serious tropical plant grower, orchids for ~50 yr. I taught the Biochem sections of a Botany course at the UW-Madison. More importantly I mostly have done research on microbes and fungi and biodegradation/environmental applications.
Along the way I worked for a biocontrol company researching and manufacturing products which were microbes isolated from plants. They came from rare seedling survivors of plants attacked by microbial pathogen, such as blights, mildews and rots. Thousands of seedlings and only one pot or two would survive. Little custers of pots together or widely and randomly distributed.
Turns out that certain naturally-ocurring microbes had colonized the healthy plant surfaces and were competing with pathogens so they couldn't attack. Thus, spraying seedlings or young plant surfaces with the 'good' non-pathogenic microbes resulted in amazing protection levels. It's no surprize to most orchid growers that plant leaves and roots are not seperate from microbes in nature.
And I also have friends that have sold essential plant extract oils for years such as Clove, Cinnamon and lemon oil. And cinnamon power is a known organic natural antiseptic put on tropical plant division wounds to heal them ... perceive s theme developing here?
Let's forget the NPK fertilizer discussion or natural minerals in the water HB-101 product. They are not likely relevant to the method of action. One to four drops per gallon OR even quart would dilute them so much that they would not be a factor. I do agree with the feeling that Gibberelic Acid GA3 or other plant hormones hidden in mix could be a factor in success. Such factors can be active at huge dilutions. However, they don't mention them and results could be mixed with any hormone cocktail used on a range of plants.
What they do disclose is that extracts of Cypress, other Softwood trees are the materials used. Simple extracts are most typically terpene oil extracts, especially if not colored like there product is. And the product indeed smells like essential oils. When you put the drop(s) in water it gives a light haziness which I looks like what a surfactant soap would do to solublize such hydrophobic extractives.
What they claim is that the miracle solution protects the plants and favors or helps certain benefials microbes. Nice theory but no careful scientific proof. But my suggestion is that IF people are indeed seeing some benefits in use then it may indeed work, correctly done empiracle experiments don't lie! IF it is observed to help, below is rationale for potential mechanisms).
Plant extractives like this are typically made by a plant to prevent or reduce microbial attack. If you dilute the toxin/poison enough then it is like an antiseptic for the surface, much like mouthwash kills bacteria in your mouth, but hopefully not you. Now this is at the toxin levels used. Tree antiseptics at low surface concentrations could select for resistant microbes normally colonizing plants that actually do help. So it could help either as an antiseptic against all or bad microbed and/or a selector of helpful microbes (as they suggest it does).
However HB-101 can't help by this method if the major challenge of the plant is not microbial. For the sake of this discussion, let's say they are right and it is due to microbial selection effects.
Most orchids do well on bark or other microbially resistant materials until they break down enough to support the wrong micobes. Fir and other softwood barks would have their own potentially protective extractives when freshet. So I can see why HB-101 fits this similat senario.
Most people (me included) try to add more of anything dilute, if they don't believe the lable. A higher toxin level and carrier surfactant would likely kill many more microbes (even good or required ones) and could well burn sensitive plant tissues, such as roots. Which people do say happens if adding a little too much. To better understand this, gosh could you imagine 10x Listerine mouthwash in your mouth, which is made from pine tar extractives? Or 10x Spic and Span floor wash. The fumes would be horrible and the pine tar extractive based products could burn you. God forbid getting it in your eyes or a plant crown with expanding young tissue It might also kill you if you swallowed enough, or kill roots and leaves if you left it on their surfaces That is unless you purged it or washed it off.
Thus my working theory, when it helps, is not junk science bit rather microbial surface effects. Hormonal is one theory, but I suggest that the more likely mechanism would be exactly as they suggest. It only looks like a miracle because microbial attack or help can tax the energy of a plant or be life and death
Thoughts?
I was gifted a little at a garden show. I'm currently seeding bedding plants and transitioning tropicals and semitropicals. I'm going to see if it combats some seedling damping off (surface pathogen attack). I'm also growing some Brugmania plants from cuttings for outdoor use this year.
On plant surface oils for other toxic benefits with insects:
Since organic spidermite treatments for home use are dilute clove, garlic, cinnamon, and other plant oil extractives with surfactant to spread and stick them better, I will also try HB-101 at the recommended level against mites and insects. Cypress sure smells better than garlic oil!
Ever wonder why tomatoes and many other plants have oils on the surface? Our Nicotiana alata (Tobacco) plants for my fragrant summer moongarden have a sticky oil suface that kills knats and white flies on contact. These plants are loaded with Nicotine and similar have been used to make Nicotine for greenhouse pesticide use! I'm not sure yet where the nicotine is distributed im the plants. It doesn't dissolve well in water and might be with the oil and turpene zones. No worries farmers bred down the Nicotine level and up the flavor level in smoking tobacco so that people are entertained and generically not killed by at least this agent. And althought temping, I am not suggesting that tobacco companies are treating us just a little better than insects. Although ... if the data fits, it's one theory.
Last edited by GaryPNW; 02-28-2017 at 04:30 PM..
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02-28-2017, 05:11 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Zone: 8a
Location: Athens, Georgia, USA
Posts: 3,208
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Royal
FWIW?
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You being from Texas, perhaps it is Fort Worth is Wonderful??
---------- Post added at 04:11 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:07 PM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by GaryPNW
Empiracle testing reserarch is a neat thing. You may not know the theory why if works. But IF shown it does there then is a reason to be discovered.
I'm a PhD level Biochemist w Botany background. I'm a serious tropical plant grower, orchids for ~50 yr. I taught the Biochem sections of a Botany course at the UW-Madison. More importantly I mostly have done research on microbes and fungi and biodegradation/environmental applications.
Along the way I worked for a biocontrol company researching and manufacturing products which were microbes isolated from plants. They came from rare seedling survivors of plants attacked by microbial pathogen, such as blights, mildews and rots. Thousands of seedlings and only one pot or two would survive. Little custers of pots together or widely and randomly distributed.
Turns out that certain naturally-ocurring microbes had colonized the healthy plant surfaces and were competing with pathogens so they couldn't attack. Thus, spraying seedlings or young plant surfaces with the 'good' non-pathogenic microbes resulted in amazing protection levels. It's no surprize to most orchid growers that plant leaves and roots are not seperate from microbes in nature.
And I also have friends that have sold essential plant extract oils for years such as Clove, Cinnamon and lemon oil. And cinnamon power is a known organic natural antiseptic put on tropical plant division wounds to heal them ... perceive s theme developing here?
Let's forget the NPK fertilizer discussion or natural minerals in the water HB-101 product. They are not likely relevant to the method of action. One to four drops per gallon OR even quart would dilute them so much that they would not be a factor. I do agree with the feeling that Gibberelic Acid GA3 or other plant hormones hidden in mix could be a factor in success. Such factors can be active at huge dilutions. However, they don't mention them and results could be mixed with any hormone cocktail used on a range of plants.
What they do disclose is that extracts of Cypress, other Softwood trees are the materials used. Simple extracts are most typically terpene oil extracts, especially if not colored like there product is. And the product indeed smells like essential oils. When you put the drop(s) in water it gives a light haziness which I looks like what a surfactant soap would do to solublize such hydrophobic extractives.
What they claim is that the miracle solution protects the plants and favors or helps certain benefials microbes. Nice theory but no careful scientific proof. But my suggestion is that IF people are indeed seeing some benefits in use then it may indeed work, correctly done empiracle experiments don't lie! IF it is observed to help, below is rationale for potential mechanisms).
Plant extractives like this are typically made by a plant to prevent or reduce microbial attack. If you dilute the toxin/poison enough then it is like an antiseptic for the surface, much like mouthwash kills bacteria in your mouth, but hopefully not you. Now this is at the toxin levels used. Tree antiseptics at low surface concentrations could select for resistant microbes normally colonizing plants that actually do help. So it could help either as an antiseptic against all or bad microbed and/or a selector of helpful microbes (as they suggest it does).
However HB-101 can't help by this method if the major challenge of the plant is not microbial. For the sake of this discussion, let's say they are right and it is due to microbial selection effects.
Most orchids do well on bark or other microbially resistant materials until they break down enough to support the wrong micobes. Fir and other softwood barks would have their own potentially protective extractives when freshet. So I can see why HB-101 fits this similat senario.
Most people (me included) try to add more of anything dilute, if they don't believe the lable. A higher toxin level and carrier surfactant would likely kill many more microbes (even good or required ones) and could well burn sensitive plant tissues, such as roots. Which people do say happens if adding a little too much. To better understand this, gosh could you imagine 10x Listerine mouthwash in your mouth, which is made from pine tar extractives? Or 10x Spic and Span floor wash. The fumes would be horrible and the pine tar extractive based products could burn you. God forbid getting it in your eyes or a plant crown with expanding young tissue It might also kill you if you swallowed enough, or kill roots and leaves if you left it on their surfaces That is unless you purged it or washed it off.
Thus my working theory, when it helps, is not junk science bit rather microbial surface effects. Hormonal is one theory, but I suggest that the more likely mechanism would be exactly as they suggest. It only looks like a miracle because microbial attack or help can tax the energy of a plant or be life and death
Thoughts?
I was gifted a little at a garden show. I'm currently seeding bedding plants and transitioning tropicals and semitropicals. I'm going to see if it combats some seedling damping off (surface pathogen attack). I'm also growing some Brugmania plants from cuttings for outdoor use this year.
On plant surface oils for other toxic benefits with insects:
Since organic spidermite treatments for home use are dilute clove, garlic, cinnamon, and other plant oil extractives with surfactant to spread and stick them better, I will also try HB-101 at the recommended level against mites and insects. Cypress sure smells better than garlic oil!
Ever wonder why tomatoes and many other plants have oils on the surface? Our Nicotiana alata (Tobacco) plants for my fragrant summer moongarden have a sticky oil suface that kills knats and white flies on contact. These plants are loaded with Nicotine and similar have been used to make Nicotine for greenhouse pesticide use! I'm not sure yet where the nicotine is distributed im the plants. It doesn't dissolve well in water and might be with the oil and turpene zones. No worries farmers bred down the Nicotine level and up the flavor level in smoking tobacco so that people are entertained and generically not killed by at least this agent. And althought temping, I am not suggesting that tobacco companies are treating us just a little better than insects. Although ... if the data fits, it's one theory.
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Sorry Gary, I'm pretty much ruling it out. I'm concerned with a product whose #1 inorganic element is sodium.
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02-28-2017, 05:20 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2016
Zone: 6a
Location: Northern Indiana
Posts: 5,540
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Royal
FWIW?
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For what it's worth.
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03-02-2017, 12:04 PM
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Member
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Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 41
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I am using Aptus Regulater as an additive.
Aptus Regulator | Aptus
I never tested the difference between using it and not using it.
Silicon | Aptus
Last edited by Jacob Reitsma; 03-02-2017 at 12:10 PM..
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