Heather, I was wondering the same thing. If no one knows with certainty, you might have to do a little experimentation.. try growing two plants in seperate containers, one treated with cs and one not. The outcome would be interesting. Lola H.
On Sun, Feb 24, 2013 at 3:39 PM, Heather W <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks James, > > I heard about using CS in the soil for plant growth. I also make compost > tea. I've been wondering if the CS will harm the benificial microbes in > soil? I've used it as a bug spray and it worked great but I haven't used it > in the soil for fear of killing all the microbes I worked to grow. What has > been your experience? > On Feb 24, 2013 2:02 PM, "James McDonald" <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Just don't mention the medical benifits of CS and they will leave you >> alone-- sell it as a plant additive that helps the plants grow! And dont >> have any info around you about Colloidal Silver, you should be ok! >> >> >> ------------------------------ >> *From:* Heather W <[email protected]> >> *To:* [email protected] >> *Sent:* Sunday, February 24, 2013 1:51 PM >> *Subject:* CS>Selling CS products >> >> I have a farmers market buisness where I make natural herbal balms and >> soaps. I get great results for myself, my family, and customers. I recently >> descovered the beauty of CS and have been making it for family. The CS has >> worked wonders on some black phsoriasis that the pine tar soap didnt heal. >> It also is used at first sign of any cold or flu of anyone in the house. >> Nine people including two young children have avoided antibiotics all >> winter. >> I would love to offer a colloidal silver product to my line up at the >> market, but I have legitimate fears of regulatory retaliation. Does anyone >> have any experience with this? Can anyone offer any advice? Thanks in >> advance. >> Heather >> >> >>

