Hi, thanks for sharing your experience using the Jadam methods. (1) Have you found the 2 solutions effective in your garden in controlling pests and plant diseases? (2) Have the results in using these 2 solutions been better than whatever commercial products you have used previously?
The peach and plum trees are about ten years old, but I only started helping look after them last year, so don’t have a lot of experience to draw upon. Last year we were in Covid lockdown over winter, so the trees were not sprayed with anything. I was able to visit the farm in spring 2021 by which stage the peaches were severely damaged by leaf curl and the aphids had eaten all of the leaves from the plums. So I decided to spray them with Jadam wetting agent and Jadam sulphur in winter 2022. The peaches are still affected by leaf curl this spring, and the plums are still affected by aphid, but no where near as bad as last year. I’ve heard other people complain that their peaches are badly affected by leaf curl this year despite using copper spray (because we are in the middle of another la ninia and fungal infections are abundant). I’ll continue to use both of these Jadam products, but will spray four times next year instead of the three times that I did this year (1. When the autumn leaves are still on the trees. 2. Winter. 3/4. Bud burst timing). I’m also trying to improve the overall health of the trees so that they can withstand disease better. The Jadam wetting agent has been fantastic in the battle against spider mite on my sweet potato plants (the sweet potato plants needed to be brought inside the house to over winter, which leaves them vulnerable to spider mites and gnats).
Sorry but I don’t know that answer to your question because I just use the Jadam sulphur on my peach trees to prevent leaf curl. You might like to direct your question to the Korean Natural Farming Facebook page ❤️
I think the Jadam sulphur is mainly used for fungal infections. The Jadam wetting agent can be used as a pesticide but I think it works by suffocating bugs such as aphids and I’m not sure that it works as a deterrent after it is dry. For example, I sprayed it on a plant with aphids. Most of the aphids died, but I had to spray it a second time to get rid of the stragglers. So the stragglers weren’t impacted by the dried wetting agent. Maybe you could ask that question on a Korean Natural Farming Facebook page.
I’m not sure as I don’t know much about chemistry and would just be guessing at an answer. I followed the instructions from Korean Natural Farming so you’d probably be best to ask that question on a KNF forum. I hope all goes well with your solution 😊
@@cooltemperategardeninginca3288 Thank you, I have check safety data sheet of product after chemical reaction is safe. What is the result after applying to plant.
I think that the chemical reaction from the specified ingredients melts the sulphur and keeps it suspended in the liquid so you don’t need to stir it each time you use it. I’m not sure if that would work as effectively if you substituted KOH for NaOH 🤷♀️. Would be safest to ask someone who knows before swapping. I’ve used Jadam sulphur for two years now on the peach trees. Mixed it with Jadam wetting agent as per the KNF instructions. The first year I applied it once in autumn and twice in winter. Worked fairly well, but there were still a few leaves affected by leaf curl. Last year I sprayed every month from late autumn and there was NO leaf curl on most of the trees (but one tree had about five curly leaves, which wasn’t too bad). It was a fairly dry winter. I didn’t leave any trees unsprayed so am unable to compare how the trees would have been without the treatment.
There are a few available online. I mainly watch the Jadam/KNF RUclips videos and Facebook discussions. Here’s an example of one book. Is that the type you’re after? www.amazon.com.au/JADAM-Organic-Farming-all-Natural-Ultra-Low-Cost/dp/8989220203
@@cooltemperategardeninginca3288 Ohh, you did not use Potassium Hydroxide interesting. Bunnings no longer sells this here in Melbourne, sadly I have been struggling to find supply.
@@VASI_LIKI I used sodium hydroxide for the Jadam Sulphur, but I used potassium hydroxide for the Jadam wetting agent. I couldn’t source it locally either so purchased it online from the following website. Let me know how you go 😊. heirloombodycare.com.au
I use sulphur based products for leaf curl because they are meant to have less impact on the soil microbes than would occur if I used copper based products. So I’m not sure how effective JS would be on root fungus. You might like to seek advice from a Korean Natural Farming site. Good luck ❤️
Thanks for watching. Does the following website help with translation? www.penjedar.com/bisnis/pr-1904172766/jadam-pertanian-organik-bahasa-indonesia-kita-adalah-ahli-pertanian
Interesting. I did wonder about that because they use potassium hydroxide in the Jadam wetting agent. I think I read that the sodium hydroxide provided a stronger reaction that was required to properly dissolve the sulphur. And is it more alkaline to neutralise the acidity of the sulphur? I don’t know much about chemistry so wouldn’t have the knowledge or confidence to change the recipe.
@cooltemperategardeninginca3288 nope, KOH is a strong base too then you'll get the same reaction as well. I've learned from USDA that sodium excess causes many health problems and the plants needs more potassium than sodium so if you reacting Sulfur + KOH you'll get potassium sulfide + potassium thiosulfate at the same time, no need to acidify because the dose only 2ml/litre. Try it on your plants then tell me on your next video 😊
Great video, I have to follow your recipes to make these liquit, thank you for sharing.
☺️
a very well made video, thanks for sharing
Thank you very much!
Awesome to know I can grab those from the garden store going to be very easy ❤
I was pleased about that too. I needed mail order for one of the Jadam Wetting Agent products though. I hope yours turns out well :)
This is new to me! thanks for sharing
It's winter here now, so time for me to start spraying. Hopefully it will work well 😊
Hi, thanks for sharing your experience using the Jadam methods. (1) Have you found the 2 solutions effective in your garden in controlling pests and plant diseases? (2) Have the results in using these 2 solutions been better than whatever commercial products you have used previously?
The peach and plum trees are about ten years old, but I only started helping look after them last year, so don’t have a lot of experience to draw upon. Last year we were in Covid lockdown over winter, so the trees were not sprayed with anything. I was able to visit the farm in spring 2021 by which stage the peaches were severely damaged by leaf curl and the aphids had eaten all of the leaves from the plums. So I decided to spray them with Jadam wetting agent and Jadam sulphur in winter 2022. The peaches are still affected by leaf curl this spring, and the plums are still affected by aphid, but no where near as bad as last year. I’ve heard other people complain that their peaches are badly affected by leaf curl this year despite using copper spray (because we are in the middle of another la ninia and fungal infections are abundant). I’ll continue to use both of these Jadam products, but will spray four times next year instead of the three times that I did this year (1. When the autumn leaves are still on the trees. 2. Winter. 3/4. Bud burst timing). I’m also trying to improve the overall health of the trees so that they can withstand disease better.
The Jadam wetting agent has been fantastic in the battle against spider mite on my sweet potato plants (the sweet potato plants needed to be brought inside the house to over winter, which leaves them vulnerable to spider mites and gnats).
Very interesting methods, I must try
🙂
Thanks Neil 😊
Terimakasih ilmu ini
Thanks for watching 😊
my seedlings have fungus growing in the potting soil, will this kill it with out killing the seedlings?
Sorry but I don’t know that answer to your question because I just use the Jadam sulphur on my peach trees to prevent leaf curl. You might like to direct your question to the Korean Natural Farming Facebook page ❤️
After the spray dries, does it still kill bugs?
I think the Jadam sulphur is mainly used for fungal infections. The Jadam wetting agent can be used as a pesticide but I think it works by suffocating bugs such as aphids and I’m not sure that it works as a deterrent after it is dry.
For example, I sprayed it on a plant with aphids. Most of the aphids died, but I had to spray it a second time to get rid of the stragglers. So the stragglers weren’t impacted by the dried wetting agent.
Maybe you could ask that question on a Korean Natural Farming Facebook page.
The Korean guy said it kills fungus after drying too
Can I use KOH instead of NaOH?
I’m not sure as I don’t know much about chemistry and would just be guessing at an answer. I followed the instructions from Korean Natural Farming so you’d probably be best to ask that question on a KNF forum. I hope all goes well with your solution 😊
@@cooltemperategardeninginca3288 Thank you, I have check safety data sheet of product after chemical reaction is safe. What is the result after applying to plant.
I think that the chemical reaction from the specified ingredients melts the sulphur and keeps it suspended in the liquid so you don’t need to stir it each time you use it. I’m not sure if that would work as effectively if you substituted KOH for NaOH 🤷♀️. Would be safest to ask someone who knows before swapping.
I’ve used Jadam sulphur for two years now on the peach trees. Mixed it with Jadam wetting agent as per the KNF instructions. The first year I applied it once in autumn and twice in winter. Worked fairly well, but there were still a few leaves affected by leaf curl. Last year I sprayed every month from late autumn and there was NO leaf curl on most of the trees (but one tree had about five curly leaves, which wasn’t too bad). It was a fairly dry winter. I didn’t leave any trees unsprayed so am unable to compare how the trees would have been without the treatment.
Koh and naoh are different
I've tried finding books on jadam gardening but haven't seen any can you suggest any?
There are a few available online. I mainly watch the Jadam/KNF RUclips videos and Facebook discussions. Here’s an example of one book. Is that the type you’re after?
www.amazon.com.au/JADAM-Organic-Farming-all-Natural-Ultra-Low-Cost/dp/8989220203
Go to RUclips look up garden like a viking best informative gardening channel
Jadam korean natural farming, orange book
can u advise where u bought the products?
I bought the sodium hydroxide and the pure sulphur from Bunnings.
@@cooltemperategardeninginca3288 Ohh, you did not use Potassium Hydroxide interesting. Bunnings no longer sells this here in Melbourne, sadly I have been struggling to find supply.
@@VASI_LIKI I used sodium hydroxide for the Jadam Sulphur, but I used potassium hydroxide for the Jadam wetting agent. I couldn’t source it locally either so purchased it online from the following website. Let me know how you go 😊.
heirloombodycare.com.au
아주 좋아요 자닮
Thanks for watching 😊
Can Jadeum Sulfur Kill Plant Root Fungus?*Need urgent repply KIND PLZ.*
I use sulphur based products for leaf curl because they are meant to have less impact on the soil microbes than would occur if I used copper based products. So I’m not sure how effective JS would be on root fungus. You might like to seek advice from a Korean Natural Farming site. Good luck ❤️
Saya ingin mencoba nya
Thanks for watching. Does the following website help with translation?
www.penjedar.com/bisnis/pr-1904172766/jadam-pertanian-organik-bahasa-indonesia-kita-adalah-ahli-pertanian
Replace sodium hydroxide with potassium hydroxide, that's way much better for human consumption
Interesting. I did wonder about that because they use potassium hydroxide in the Jadam wetting agent.
I think I read that the sodium hydroxide provided a stronger reaction that was required to properly dissolve the sulphur. And is it more alkaline to neutralise the acidity of the sulphur? I don’t know much about chemistry so wouldn’t have the knowledge or confidence to change the recipe.
@cooltemperategardeninginca3288 nope, KOH is a strong base too then you'll get the same reaction as well.
I've learned from USDA that sodium excess causes many health problems and the plants needs more potassium than sodium so if you reacting Sulfur + KOH you'll get potassium sulfide + potassium thiosulfate at the same time, no need to acidify because the dose only 2ml/litre.
Try it on your plants then tell me on your next video 😊
Good to know! Thanks for sharing ☺️
Ah, no wonder I got pneumonia. This causes it.
😳😨
ruclips.net/video/EuRT30AWAjc/видео.html