Hi everyone,
I've been lurking for a while and thought I should finally join in. I really appreciate all your expertise and advise!
The forum has been slow lately and I hope thus will stir things up a little.
I've had very little success with the wild-simulated method thus far, just letting them fend for themselves. I know this could be due to many reasons including soil, light, pests, predation, poor seed quality, disease, etc. I planted early last Spring and only had 5-10 % survival in a few different plots. I had ~95 % germination indoors but almost all of the seedlings succumbed to damping off. I DID NOT bleach the seed because they were all smiling and sprouting and I was worried I would kill them. Do you guys bleach smiling seed? If so, what's a safe concentration of bleach?
I'm convinced my ginseng was diseased from the supplier so I am on an anti-fungal research quest. I just bought some more seed for another spring planting and I'm determined to get better results this year.
I've read many of the previous threads on mycorrhizal communities and I'm very interested in their fungicidal properties. I would prefer treating my seeds and plants with a naturally occurring beneficial microorganism than synthetic carcinogens.
After much googling and searching this site, the most beneficial seem to be Streptomyces (bacteria in Actinovite) and Trichoderma (Ampac Biotech). I'm considering doing a comparison study this year.
Does anyone have any updates using these or other similar anti-fungal microorganisms?
I assume that most chemical fungicides would not be selective enough to distinguish between the \"ggod\" and the \"bad\" fungi and I would prefer not to continually spray toxins. However, I am interested in hearing what fungicial regimens have worked for all of you.
Looking forward to your responses, hopefully we can all help each other increase our crop yield!