Hi, 

One can use plant sap analysis mainly to determine what nutrients to use in 
foliar spray applications.  This can be especially important in 
transition while building the soil to higher energy levels, but not 
always necessary. 

A Brix meter can be an indicator.  And plant sugar is just one thing 
that we are after. The thickness of the interface line between the 
refracted and not refracted liquid is an indicator of minerals.  Another 
concern besides just having materials present, is also what energies are 
stored in the materials, structure of the molecules, and cosmic strength 
of constituent components, etc. 

Nutrients absorbed from the soil are dependent on the life force of the 
soil, which may be indicated by several parameters, one being the sacred 
geometric ratios between minerals, cation exchange capacity, and 
companion minerals.  Earthworms, microbes, myccorhizae and all natural 
entities "naturally" implement their primordial design to bring about 
these ratios. 

One does not necessarily have to do soil testing, the report of which is 
a dynamic, changing photograph.  It may speed up the transition 
progress, however, where monetary considerations are important.  The 
most important factor in Agriculture from our perspective is the 
realization and bringing about the energies needed, and also, the 
Spiritual transformation of those involved. 

Timothy Hollingsworth 
Green Gold International 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Lloyd Charles wrote: 

> Allan wrote 
> 
> ".  Brix can readily be affected by  foliar applications can't it? 
-Allan " 
> 
> Above is the most important little snippet of information thats been 
on this 
> list for ages 
> 
> I know that (but dont understand why)  a lot of organic and BD  
certified 
> producers are philosophicaly opposed to foliar nutrient applications. 
When 
> farmers are in the situation where we dont have our soils in balance 
yet, or 
> something else is wrong that has put our system off the track for a 
while 
> and we are suffering insect or disease attack, or poor plant growth 
due to 
> some nutritional disorder then is when we can make a major improvement 
in 
> quality of produce by using the brix meter to monitor the crops 
response to 
> a range of available foliar nutrients. And there are plenty of nice 
things 
> to use this includes the BD preps, fish emulsion, kelp, worm juice, 
compost 
> teas, manure teas, molasses, sugar, vinegar, etc etc as well as the 
host of 
> proprietary brand stuff, and the so called nasties from the chemical 
> companies ( we often use small quantities of say calcium nitrate -1/2 
to 1 
> kg per hectare -combined with molasses and fish emulsion or 300 to 500 
ml of 
> food grade phosphoric acid  with a molasses - kelp -  fish - homebrew 
tea ) 
> 
> I use four small pump spray bottles from the supermarket to test for 
crop 
> response - mix the different brews in the exact proportion that will 
be put 
> out with the field sprayer, spray a meter square plot of each and 
measure 
> the brix response half an hour later, you will often get a down 
response 
> from a perfectly good material that is just not appropriate at the 
time - 
> whichever bottle mix gives the best crop response (increased brix of 
crop 
> and decreased brix of any weeds) is the one to use and less quantity 
is 
> usually better than more 
> 
> The crop response (yield and quality ) that can be achieved at low 
cost 
> using this method can be truly amazing. We have had several times 
where 
> brews that ran around a dollar an acre material cost have given 
several 
> bushels per acre more wheat as well as lessening the vigour of weeds 
in the 
> crop 
> 
> This is not rocket science and its not new either 
> I read the brix mans online book this morning and would recommend it 
to 
> all - and while it seems written more for the consumer than the 
producer - 
> its good information - as also the book by Arden Andersen that is 
referred 
> to there 
> 
> For those having difficulty finding instruments at a reasonable price 
in 
> Australia or New Zealand   David Von Pein in Queensland is the most 
cost 
> effective supplier of this gear that I have seen (dont know how this 
bloke 
> makes a profit he's heaps cheaper than most) - OK thats a plug but I 
have no 
> financial connection ! 
> 
>  After we get our soils properly balanced and remineralised to 
Albrecht 
> standards and get our biodynamics working right and everything else is 
good 
> then I suppose what I have written here no longer applies - in the 
mean time 
> its another tool we can all use to grow better quality produce at 
less 
> expense for the good of all - and I know at least one feller that 
needs to 
> make a profit from his farm in the short term. 
> 
> Best to all for the new year 
> Lloyd Charles 
 
-- 

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