Molasses help!

muney420

Member
So I mixed up a few gallon jugs with 1 table spoon of molasses and some kool bloom an left it for my gf to water. 2 weeks later I return an the soil it wet (just got watered) but it stinks! Like nasty molasses! Has it rotted and should I flush sense she has been getting the same stuff for 2 weeks? She looks fine nice an healthy. But that soil is stinky! Thanks for help
 

Chiggachamp

Active Member
What kinda mollasses??
And i mean if ur plants looks healthy and love it then whats to worry about?
Read ur plants they will tell you everything
 

stumpjumper

Well-Known Member
You havent watered in 2 weeks?, I? I use 2 tbsp per 5 gallons of water. I've never noticed a STINK, but you can smell the molasses in the water. I've never noticed it in the soil from 2 weeks ago though. Sounds like you mixed it kind of heavy. As long as your plants are looking good don't worry about it.
 

HotShot7414

Well-Known Member
It's probably not the molasses at all,maybe you have drainage issues,could have just been water logged,which does cause root rot.
 

stumps

Well-Known Member
I'll bet it has more to do with the kool bloom sitting for two weeks. I've had molasses mixed for months with no ill effects. just saying.
 

george xxx

Active Member
I use it weekly, 2 tablespoons per gallon of water. Use it fresh. It grows scum very quickly. If you mix some in a clear container and leave sit overnight the next day you will see a cloudy mass in the bottom inch or two.
 

muney420

Member
I use it weekly, 2 tablespoons per gallon of water. Use it fresh. It grows scum very quickly. If you mix some in a clear container and leave sit overnight the next day you will see a cloudy mass in the bottom inch or two.
Yeah it was in a clear container. And I'm using molasses because I'm flowering?
 
yeah an environment that is filled with h20 and sugars, carbs, nutes. that's everything nasty bacteria need to grow. won't necessarily always go bad but depending on your temps/local flora you could potentially get some smelly mold or bacteria in your soil. it probably wont be super bad for your girls, i might flush for a few days to be safe. caution is always the name of the game for me with mold and such
 

muney420

Member
yeah an environment that is filled with h20 and sugars, carbs, nutes. that's everything nasty bacteria need to grow. won't necessarily always go bad but depending on your temps/local flora you could potentially get some smelly mold or bacteria in your soil. it probably wont be super bad for your girls, i might flush for a few days to be safe. caution is always the name of the game for me with mold and such
What if I just stop with the molasses and just use water mixed with kool bloom from now on.
 
HotShot makes a good point - so does stumpjumper - my experience with molasses has been quite positive - I run it in a hydro system rather than "flavoring agents" with the philosophy of wanting to bring out the flavor of the strain versus "flavoring" it - also compliments my approximately 1/2 organic regimen - BUT, if I run it any stronger than 1TSP per gallon, it turns my reservoir into a rootbeer float - I would keep using it, just choke it back some - my garden seems to love it.
 

stumps

Well-Known Member
you Guys know molasses don't do a thing for the plant. Right? it feeds all the little critters in the soil and they help your plant. A tsp per gal every 2-3 weeks is plenty. if your soil gets crusty on top you know your using to much molasses.
 

|B3RNY|

Well-Known Member
So I mixed up a few gallon jugs with 1 table spoon of molasses and some kool bloom an left it for my gf to water. 2 weeks later I return an the soil it wet (just got watered) but it stinks! Like nasty molasses! Has it rotted and should I flush sense she has been getting the same stuff for 2 weeks? She looks fine nice an healthy. But that soil is stinky! Thanks for help

If you drench your soil in molasses, then of course it's gonna smell like the stuff... mixing it "right" is important, there's no guidelines for this- it's just theory anyways but I see most (as well as myself, when applicable) suggesting & using around 1 or 2 tbsp per gallon. There is sugars, starches, phosphorous & potassium in Grandma's molasses, there's no doubt or argument about that; so, it can be beneficial in flower. Since molasses is mostly sugar, you definitely want to use it freshly mixed; leaving it to sit for a couple weeks most likely brewed up all kinds of bacteria, molds, etc. I see you''re using chemical nutrients anyways, so try this- flush your pots with a h2o2/ water solution (about 3 -4 drops of 3% hydrogen peroxide per gallon of water; 1 drop with 33% h2o2), about 2-3 times as much of the solution as your pot will hold, then let them drain very well.. wait a couple hours and then add the original nutrients as this flush will clean your soil out. The peroxide will destroy any harmful (as well as beneficial) bacterias, the beneficial ones will grow back later, but this will rid your soil of the odors. A day or 2 later you may water with some freshly mixed molasses/water to help grow & feed a new army of beneficial bacterias. (Btw: beneficial bacteria colonies are usually wiped out every time a chemical fertilizer is used, so if you use chemical fertilizers, saving beneficial's shouldn't be a priority of yours anyways.)
This is just what I suggest, I do it any time a strange odor is produced by my plants whether in soil or hydro.

Peroxide offers many benefits for plants in general (not only Cannabis growers use it.) Although it is not wise to use it along wit beneficial bacterias & organic nutrients since it will sterilize (kill) all of the bacteria without discrimination... but if you use all chemical fertilizers anyways then give it a shot.. if you decide to also use something organic or 'alive' then just wait a day or 2, making sure not to mix it with anything containing h2o2 until the h2o2 has had time to turn back into water (yes, this happens... usually within hours but I'd recommend a day to be safe.) It can add co2/oxygen to foliage(in liquid form!), add oxygen to roots, remove harmful bacteria & odors, help maintain a healthy system (hydroponics), keep roots clean & white, cure/treat root rot, etc., etc. Look into it for real.

Molasses contains a LOT of sugar (glucose, fructose, sucrose), carbs, potassium, phosphorous, iron (blackstrap molasses), calcium, magnesium and more so the above statement is not 100% correct, I agree that those are the most desirable benefits but molasses can do a lot for a plant in the right situation & application.
 
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