Super Thrive "world champion"

eskoloks

Active Member
41CGSBX1TNL.jpgI've been using this "superthrive" on my plant it seems to b working well...does any 1 use this product?
 

Izoc666

Well-Known Member
oh yeah i used this and still have this bottle for several years ! i used only for transplant and clone as well...its pretty works good for me.

happy growing.
 

Total Head

Well-Known Member
i find that it gives me issues when i use it on plants, but it is a staple in my seed germing solution. i put a couple drops of it in a cup of warm water and soak my paper towel in it. i use a sandwich bag and my cable box to keep the thing warm and moist until i see tails.

to be fair i have stopped doing comparison runs with/without superthrive because i determined years ago that i get more tails with it than without. not very scientific i guess but i lose very few seeds and it's not much effort to unscrew the cap and put some drops in a cup of water.
 

Rascality Afoot

Well-Known Member
I use B vitamins when cloning and germinating. It works extremely well for this purpose. I have also found plants respond well to a few odd mL of B vitamin during veg and flowering as opposed to plants that don't get it. B Vitamins benefit your plant, and algae, and fungus. Soil microbes from your store of choice help prevent this in an organic garden. Hydrogen Peroxide will help in a chemical garden. This is why there was fungus and algae on the samples with the B Vitamin. To me, all that study shows is that daffodils don't respond well to B Vitamins. Find a study done with herb and you'll have more accuracy. Oh wait! Nutrient companies already have! There's plenty of usefull things to market to growers, so most established nutrient companies don't stoop to selling "snake oil". Find the ones that work best for you! The only good nutrients are the ones that work well for YOU.
 

nuglets

New Member
I use B vitamins when cloning and germinating. It works extremely well for this purpose. I have also found plants respond well to a few odd mL of B vitamin during veg and flowering as opposed to plants that don't get it. B Vitamins benefit your plant, and algae, and fungus. Soil microbes from your store of choice help prevent this in an organic garden. Hydrogen Peroxide will help in a chemical garden. This is why there was fungus and algae on the samples with the B Vitamin. To me, all that study shows is that daffodils don't respond well to B Vitamins. Find a study done with herb and you'll have more accuracy. Oh wait! Nutrient companies already have! There's plenty of usefull things to market to growers, so most established nutrient companies don't stoop to selling "snake oil". Find the ones that work best for you! The only good nutrients are the ones that work well for YOU.
i agree 100%. there are plenty of studies that show the benefits of B-1 vitamins in plant growth; especially in soil and as a foliar spray. i use 1 drop per gallon in the water that i soak my rockwool cubes in, every other watering in veg, and for all transplants. i use 2 drops for sick plants and following flushes.
 

jofey

Active Member
i used S T in my first grow and everything was hunky dorry but with my second i got a lot of f@ck up and weird leaves with the bottom ones bearing the brunt and dying ,curling up and other nasties i always remember that a little goes a long way :clap: and i only make 2 litres of food at a time that way if i fuck it,, it is easier to fix :wall: :hump: :hump::clap::clap::clap:
 

homebrewer

Well-Known Member
A guy by the name of James Bonner in the 1930's discovered that thiamin (vitamin B-1) was able to restore growth to pea root tips that had
languished in tissue culture. By 1942 Bonner was debunking his own discoveries, stating that the effect only ever occurred in very few plants and that since thiamin was found in soil itself, field applications were unlikely to benefit plants. Bonner ultimately fully retracted his claims of efficacy by saying “It is now certain, however, that additions of vitamin B1 to intact growing plants have no significant or useful place in horticultural or agricultural practice”.

Page 7: http://ceventura.ucdavis.edu/newsletters/Topics_in_Subtropics39882.pdf
 

asdfkry

Active Member
i noticed no difference, while using Superthrive for 1 year. that tiny bottle hasnt been touched in over 2 years :P
 
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