It is such a great series, for sure. Without this information, I would definitely not be having the results I have had over the last two years. … Love the more info being offered here (for free).
Regarding blueberries (in particular) and nitrates, they will and can uptake them perfectly fine. It's not the root proton pump that's the issue, but the limit of nitrate reductase in the plant itself that keeps the NO3->NH4 reverse reaction inefficient. Beyond my understanding, I don't know why it is this way with these plants, but oddly the byproducts don't seem to travel from the root through the xylem. What happens in vegas, stays in vegas.
Thank you for these. When you're done make sure to put them together into a playlist. Your geeky videos are my favorite. As an aside, have you read the book "Botany for Gardeners" by Brian Capon? Your videos remind of that book. If you haven't I think you'ld like it.
This coming year i plan to actually take measurements of the soil and see what specific things matter for getting the growing i want with the effort required
Sorry working for agronomy I view it as fertilizer because it’s what we reference when talking about ammonium. Below article might clarify plasmonics.tech/resources/what-is-hydrogen-used-for/
Video 2! Probably one of the most obvious but also the most commonly messed up when it comes to application.
Excellent series! Please keep posting these.
It is such a great series, for sure. Without this information, I would definitely not be having the results I have had over the last two years. … Love the more info being offered here (for free).
Thanks, will do!
Love the series so far thank you for all this useful information!
My pleasure! I am here for guys!
Regarding blueberries (in particular) and nitrates, they will and can uptake them perfectly fine. It's not the root proton pump that's the issue, but the limit of nitrate reductase in the plant itself that keeps the NO3->NH4 reverse reaction inefficient. Beyond my understanding, I don't know why it is this way with these plants, but oddly the byproducts don't seem to travel from the root through the xylem. What happens in vegas, stays in vegas.
Not too nerdy. Love it.
Love your videos!
Glad you like them!
Thank you for these. When you're done make sure to put them together into a playlist. Your geeky videos are my favorite. As an aside, have you read the book "Botany for Gardeners" by Brian Capon? Your videos remind of that book. If you haven't I think you'ld like it.
That's a great idea!
I’ll check it out!
The 17 Essential Nutrient Series -- an Advent Calendar for Gardeners!
This is so interesting. … Like the chemistry involved in all of this. … Can an acidic loving plant, do well in a neutral PH (7) soil?
This coming year i plan to actually take measurements of the soil and see what specific things matter for getting the growing i want with the effort required
Commenting for Don’s dream!
Thank you very much
Hahaha awe
Hydrogen is a nutrient. Fertilizer is a commercial normalized commodity usually based on NPK marketing.
Sorry working for agronomy I view it as fertilizer because it’s what we reference when talking about ammonium. Below article might clarify
plasmonics.tech/resources/what-is-hydrogen-used-for/
💚💚
❤️❤️