I don’t think you are understanding exactly how nitrogen fixing occurs. The plant is not taking nitrogen from the air at all. The bacteria that colonise the roots are taking nitrogen from the air around the roots and then Protozoa eat that bacteria and release the soluble nitrogen for the plant. Also the science regarding a specific species of bacteria for individual plants is extremely dodgy at best. Diversity is always best, the more species the better.
At timestamp 2:24 the video shows a chart with both the weight and measurement amounts of inoculant per pound of seed. It lists .05 oz of inoculant is equal to 1/4 tbsp.
Thank you
good content man, thanks
Can it be used on my bean plants?
Yeah
Can I add the inoculant to my watering can and add it to beans while watering?
good question… i was wondering if it could be be added even after the plants have sprouted.?
I don’t think you are understanding exactly how nitrogen fixing occurs.
The plant is not taking nitrogen from the air at all. The bacteria that colonise the roots are taking nitrogen from the air around the roots and then Protozoa eat that bacteria and release the soluble nitrogen for the plant. Also the science regarding a specific species of bacteria for individual plants is extremely dodgy at best.
Diversity is always best, the more species the better.
W/o a scale.. a measurement and a close look at the amount of inoculant would've been helpful
At timestamp 2:24 the video shows a chart with both the weight and measurement amounts of inoculant per pound of seed. It lists .05 oz of inoculant is equal to 1/4 tbsp.
@@christinadavis853I love you for this. Thanks!
The numbers on my seed envelope & innoculant baggie were breaking my brain.