In this Podcast Extra episode, join John at Acres Eco Ag 2025, where he hosted a “Coffee with John Kempf” session, answering questions from the audience. In this episode, a wide range of topics are discussed, including:

  • The use of foliar-applied low-biuret urea to significantly reduce a crop’s total nitrogen requirement

  • The potential for amino acid forms of nitrogen to replace large amounts of conventional mineral nitrogen

  • Recommendations for conducting sap analysis every 7 to 10 days to identify nutrient needs

  • The necessity of using clean water free of carbonates, such as rainwater or reverse osmosis water, for effective foliar sprays.

  • AEA’s new product, Pinion, which stimulates the leaf microbiome and activates plant immune pathways.

Podcast Transcript

0:00 – 0:01
So the question was, what are my
0:01 – 0:03
thoughts on foliar -applied
0:03 – 0:03
urea,
0:04 – 0:05
melted urea,
0:05 – 0:07
as a replacement for soil
0:07 – 0:08
-applied nitrogen?
0:09 – 0:09
I love it.
0:10 – 0:11
I wish farmers would do a lot
0:11 – 0:13
more of it because their total
0:13 – 0:14
nitrogen requirement to grow a
0:14 – 0:15
crop would go down
0:14 – 0:16
substantially, it has beneficial
0:16 – 0:18
impacts on soil biology, and you
0:18 – 0:19
get very strong yield responses
0:19 – 0:20
from it. So
0:21 – 0:22
there's
0:22 – 0:23
lots of information about
0:23 – 0:24
melting urea online,
0:25 – 0:26
how to do it.
0:26 – 0:28
I'm not gonna go into detail on
0:28 – 0:29
that, but one thing I'll point
0:29 – 0:31
out that isn't common knowledge,
0:33 – 0:34
And that is you specifically
0:34 – 0:35
want a form of urea that is
0:35 – 0:37
referred to as low bi urea,
0:38 – 0:39
which means low biuret.
0:40 – 0:41
And
0:42 – 0:43
so
0:44 – 0:45
the if
0:46 – 0:49
if a grower asks me to make
0:49 – 0:51
nitrogen recommendations on
0:52 – 0:54
a corn crop, and I know nothing,
0:54 – 0:56
I have no context, I don't know
0:56 – 0:57
what the history is, I don't
0:57 – 0:59
know what the soil's ability is
0:59 – 1:00
to deliver nitrogen.
1:00 – 1:01
My preferred approach
1:02 – 1:03
is
1:04 – 1:05
to
1:05 – 1:07
apply 40
1:08 – 1:09
pounds
1:11 – 1:14
of nitrogen and 20 pounds of
1:14 – 1:15
sulfur, preferably in the form
1:15 – 1:16
of ammonium thiosulfate,
1:17 – 1:18
at or before planting,
1:19 – 1:20
and
1:20 – 1:22
wait to apply any additional
1:22 – 1:25
nitrogen until the need is
1:25 – 1:26
revealed by sap analysis, and
1:26 – 1:28
then either put on foliar
1:28 – 1:29
applications of urea,
1:29 – 1:31
or if that is not an option, to
1:31 – 1:32
put on side -dress nitrogen
1:32 – 1:33
applications.
1:35 – 1:37
So that initial push, the
1:37 – 1:38
reality is a
1:39 – 1:41
lot of the older corn genetics
1:42 – 1:44
had the ability to start strong
1:44 – 1:46
without that initial nitrogen
1:46 – 1:47
push, but a lot of modern
1:47 – 1:48
genetics don't.
1:48 – 1:49
They're very dependent on that
1:49 – 1:52
nitrogen application right
1:52 – 1:53
at the beginning.
1:54 – 1:56
And in terms of applications,
1:59 – 2:01
I've seen high as
2:02 – 2:05
three applications of 10 pounds,
2:05 – 2:06
the equivalent of 10 pounds of
2:06 – 2:07
dry urea
2:07 – 2:09
applied as a foliar over the
2:09 – 2:10
course of a season.
2:10 – 2:11
So that's 30 pounds of nitrogen,
2:11 – 2:12
or no,
2:12 – 2:13
15 pounds of nitrogen over the
2:13 – 2:14
course of a season.
2:15 – 2:17
And I've seen that replace as
2:17 – 2:19
much as 45 to 50 units of soil
2:19 – 2:20
applied nitrogen,
2:21 – 2:22
sometimes more, but those are
2:22 – 2:23
numbers that I'm comfortable
2:23 – 2:24
talking about.
2:25 – 2:26
The short answer is you can
2:26 – 2:28
dramatically reduce the nitrogen
2:28 – 2:29
requirement of the system
2:29 – 2:31
overall by applying that as a
2:31 – 2:32
foliar.
2:31 – 2:33
And corn responds very well to
2:33 – 2:34
urea applications.
2:35 – 2:37
Urea is about the best, it is
2:37 – 2:39
the best non -organic form of
2:39 – 2:40
nitrogen that you can apply as a
2:40 – 2:41
foliar,
2:40 – 2:41
in my opinion.
2:42 – 2:43
Does that answer your question?
2:43 – 2:44
All
2:44 – 2:45
right, yes.
2:50 – 2:50
Yeah,
2:58 – 3:00
so if I'm
3:00 – 3:01
understanding the question
3:01 – 3:02
correctly, the question is, what
3:02 – 3:03
are my thoughts on foliar
3:03 – 3:05
applying amino acid
3:05 – 3:07
forms of nitrogen as compared to
3:07 – 3:08
mineral forms of nitrogen and
3:08 – 3:10
the crop response they produce
3:10 – 3:10
and so forth. So
3:11 – 3:13
theoretically,
3:16 – 3:18
a pound of nitrogen coming from
3:18 – 3:20
amino acids can replace four to
3:20 – 3:22
five pounds of, in terms of crop
3:22 – 3:24
response and yield response,
3:24 – 3:25
will replace four to five pounds
3:25 – 3:26
of conventional mineral
3:26 – 3:28
nitrogen, either in ammonium or
3:28 – 3:29
nitrate form.
3:29 – 3:31
And this is why
3:31 – 3:33
in organic production,
3:34 – 3:35
Historically,
3:35 – 3:37
growers and agronomists have
3:37 – 3:38
been confused about applications
3:38 – 3:40
of liquid fish or something like
3:40 – 3:41
that, and they're putting on a
3:41 – 3:43
nitrogen quantity that is just a
3:43 – 3:44
fraction of
3:45 – 3:46
conventional nitrogen
3:46 – 3:47
applications, but they're still
3:47 – 3:48
producing very strong yield
3:48 – 3:49
responses. And it is because the
3:49 – 3:50
nitrogen content of those
3:50 – 3:51
products is in the amino acid
3:51 – 3:52
form. However,
3:54 – 3:56
our experience over the last
3:56 – 3:57
half a dozen years or more has
3:57 – 3:58
really brought
3:59 – 4:01
to light that not all amino acid
4:02 – 4:03
products are equivalent.
4:04 – 4:05
They can be equivalent in
4:05 – 4:07
nitrogen content on the label,
4:08 – 4:11
but plants absorb them as
4:11 – 4:12
foliar applications very
4:12 – 4:13
differently.
4:14 – 4:15
So
4:15 – 4:16
in,
4:17 – 4:19
just thinking out loud here,
4:19 – 4:21
speaking in, this is some very
4:21 – 4:22
broad brush strokes, but
4:23 – 4:23
In general,
4:24 – 4:25
the amino acids that are
4:25 – 4:28
produced through some type of
4:28 – 4:30
enzymatic breakdown process or
4:30 – 4:32
fermentation process are
4:32 – 4:34
much more readily absorbed than
4:34 – 4:35
others.
4:35 – 4:36
So
4:36 – 4:38
liquid fish, for example, is
4:38 – 4:39
absorbed quite readily.
4:39 – 4:41
That's why we get a nice
4:41 – 4:42
nitrogen response from liquid
4:42 – 4:43
fish historically.
4:44 – 4:45
But there are,
4:45 – 4:46
and I don't want to speak
4:46 – 4:47
disparaging of any products, so
4:47 – 4:48
I'm not going to name any
4:48 – 4:49
products, but there are some
4:49 – 4:50
amino acid powders
4:50 – 4:52
particularly plant extract
4:52 – 4:53
-based ones, such as soybean
4:53 – 4:54
powder -based,
4:54 – 4:55
that
4:55 – 4:58
the plants just don't respond to
4:58 – 4:59
it
4:59 – 5:00
very well.
5:01 – 5:03
You put on an application, and
5:03 – 5:04
you'll
5:04 – 5:06
have to try this and just
5:06 – 5:07
evaluate how products perform.
5:07 – 5:08
So
5:08 – 5:09
I'd say there is,
5:10 – 5:11
the amino acid products have a
5:11 – 5:12
great deal of promise and
5:12 – 5:14
potential. When they perform,
5:14 – 5:15
they perform incredibly well.
5:16 – 5:17
And when they don't perform,
5:17 – 5:18
they're a complete dud.
5:18 – 5:19
There's very little middle
5:19 – 5:20
ground between the two,
5:21 – 5:22
yeah.
5:22 – 5:23
Any other questions?
5:26 – 5:27
The first question,
5:28 – 5:29
you responded by
5:30 – 5:31
urea.
5:31 – 5:33
Is that the same thing that he
5:33 – 5:33
was talking about?
5:33 – 5:35
Are the two terms the same?
5:44 – 5:45
Melted urea.
5:47 – 5:51
So urea is most commonly and
5:51 – 5:52
most readily available in a dry
5:52 – 5:53
granular form.
5:54 – 5:56
And if you want to apply it
5:57 – 5:58
as
5:59 – 6:00
a liquid form, either spraying
6:00 – 6:01
it on or an irrigation system or
6:01 – 6:02
something like that,
6:02 – 6:04
it needs to be dissolved.
6:04 – 6:06
And it's sometimes referred to
6:06 – 6:07
as melted urea
6:08 – 6:10
because it dissolves fairly
6:10 – 6:11
readily.
6:12 – 6:15
But if you want to produce a
6:15 – 6:16
concentrated version of it, like
6:16 – 6:18
anything I think above 14 %
6:18 – 6:19
nitrogen,
6:19 – 6:21
It requires using hot water and
6:21 – 6:24
it requires using sometimes
6:24 – 6:25
stainless steel equipment
6:25 – 6:26
instead of poly equipment only
6:26 – 6:27
because it
6:28 – 6:29
produces, in the process of
6:29 – 6:30
melting it, it produces an
6:30 – 6:31
exothermic reaction.
6:31 – 6:32
It gets very cold.
6:33 – 6:35
I've seen the process of melting
6:35 – 6:36
urea
6:36 – 6:37
not using hot water,
6:38 – 6:39
putting an inch and a half to
6:39 – 6:40
two inches of hoarfrost on the
6:40 – 6:41
outside of a tank.
6:42 – 6:43
So
6:42 – 6:44
because of that, that language
6:44 – 6:46
is used of melted urea.
6:47 – 6:49
And the forms of granular urea,
6:50 – 6:52
the most common form
6:53 – 6:54
that is used in
6:55 – 6:56
dry broadcast fertilizer
6:56 – 6:58
applications as granular urea
6:58 – 6:59
contains this,
7:00 – 7:01
I'm not sure what the
7:01 – 7:02
appropriate term is here, but
7:02 – 7:04
I'll use the term contaminant.
7:04 – 7:05
It contains this contaminant
7:05 – 7:07
called biuret that has a
7:07 – 7:07
negative,
7:08 – 7:09
can become toxic to plants when
7:09 – 7:10
applied as a foliar in large
7:10 – 7:12
enough amounts, has a negative
7:12 – 7:13
effect to plants applied as a
7:13 – 7:14
foliar, but not when applied to
7:14 – 7:15
soil.
7:15 – 7:18
So that's why we specify
7:18 – 7:20
a specific grade of urea when
7:20 – 7:21
we're melting it and using it in
7:21 – 7:22
foliars.
7:25 – 7:26
Any other questions?
7:28 – 7:30
Surely you've woken up already.
7:31 – 7:32
Yeah.
7:39 – 7:40
What's the question exactly?
7:41 – 7:42
So you said if.
7:41 – 7:45
if...
7:45 – 7:46
So
7:45 – 7:49
the
7:49 – 7:50
question was,
7:50 – 7:51
do plants struggle to absorb
7:51 – 7:54
calcium if boron levels in soils
7:54 – 7:54
are low?
7:54 – 7:55
Did I capture that correctly?
7:57 – 7:58
Oh boy,
7:58 – 8:00
this is a fun conversation.
8:01 – 8:03
The short answer is yes.
8:04 – 8:06
When you have low boron levels,
8:06 – 8:08
plants will not absorb calcium
8:08 – 8:09
very well.
8:09 – 8:11
But much more than that, they
8:11 – 8:12
also won't move calcium around
8:12 – 8:14
inside the plant very well.
8:14 – 8:15
They won't metabolize it very
8:15 – 8:16
efficiently. The whole calcium
8:16 – 8:17
metabolism process just
8:18 – 8:20
breaks down and functions very
8:20 – 8:22
poorly if plants don't have
8:22 – 8:22
enough boron.
8:23 – 8:24
So,
8:25 – 8:26
this
8:26 – 8:28
is, I spent some time talking
8:28 – 8:31
about this in my first day
8:31 – 8:31
class,
8:32 – 8:33
but I know there's many new
8:33 – 8:35
faces here. So I'll give you a
8:35 – 8:36
quick synopsis again.
8:37 – 8:38
I'm of the persuasion that
8:39 – 8:40
if
8:40 – 8:42
If we made sure that crops had
8:42 – 8:43
adequate levels of boron,
8:43 – 8:45
the pesticide requirements and
8:45 – 8:47
the pesticide, or I should say
8:47 – 8:48
specifically insecticides, the
8:48 – 8:49
use of insecticides would drop
8:49 – 8:50
by 95 %
8:51 – 8:52
because.
8:56 – 8:56
Yes.
8:59 – 9:00
Thank you. I'll come back to
9:00 – 9:01
that. So the question was
9:01 – 9:04
specifically on boron in the
9:04 – 9:05
soil rather than as foliar
9:05 – 9:06
applications.
9:07 – 9:08
So
9:10 – 9:11
the,
9:13 – 9:15
as a result of a lot of
9:15 – 9:17
experimentation on many
9:17 – 9:18
different crops,
9:18 – 9:20
I've come to the conclusion that
9:20 – 9:23
the desired values of boron
9:24 – 9:25
are about
9:26 – 9:29
20%, between 10 and 20 % of what
9:29 – 9:30
they actually need to be
9:31 – 9:33
for really healthy plants, for
9:33 – 9:34
most crops.
9:35 – 9:35
And so
9:36 – 9:37
I'm talking,
9:38 – 9:39
there's of course different
9:39 – 9:41
soils and different crops are
9:41 – 9:42
described as having very
9:42 – 9:43
different requirements.
9:43 – 9:44
It's difficult to speak in
9:44 – 9:45
universal terms.
9:45 – 9:47
But as a general rule,
9:48 – 9:49
the very lowest level, let's say
9:49 – 9:51
we have very sandy soil,
9:51 – 9:53
the very lowest level of calcium
9:53 – 9:54
that is required to produce a
9:54 – 9:56
healthy crop is 1 ,000 parts per
9:56 – 9:57
million calcium in the soil.
9:59 – 9:59
And for
10:01 – 10:02
that 1 ,000 parts per million
10:02 – 10:03
calcium,
10:03 – 10:05
I want to see three parts per
10:05 – 10:07
million boron in the soil.
10:08 – 10:09
And that's my general,
10:10 – 10:11
Rule of thumb,
10:11 – 10:13
general ratio is 1 ,000 parts
10:13 – 10:14
per million to three.
10:14 – 10:16
So if you have soil that has
10:17 – 10:18
2 ,000 parts per million
10:18 – 10:19
calcium,
10:19 – 10:22
you can bring boron levels up to
10:22 – 10:24
six parts per million on most
10:24 – 10:26
soils and most crops and have
10:26 – 10:27
increasing positive crop
10:27 – 10:29
responses the more you bring
10:29 – 10:30
boron levels up.
10:31 – 10:33
So the least expensive way is,
10:33 – 10:34
but we haven't,
10:36 – 10:38
we've been taught to think, or
10:38 – 10:40
largely the conversation around
10:40 – 10:41
boron for many years has been
10:41 – 10:43
described as
10:43 – 10:45
using boron as a soil amendment.
10:45 – 10:46
Oh, this is something you do
10:46 – 10:47
once every three years or once
10:47 – 10:48
every five years or something
10:48 – 10:49
like that.
10:49 – 10:50
But we sure don't think about
10:50 – 10:51
nitrogen that way,
10:52 – 10:53
and we don't think about sulfur
10:53 – 10:54
that way,
10:55 – 10:56
because we recognize that
10:56 – 10:57
nitrogen and sulfur leach.
10:58 – 10:59
And boron does exactly the same
10:59 – 11:01
thing. Boron is an anion.
11:01 – 11:01
It's negatively charged.
11:01 – 11:02
It leaches out of the system.
11:03 – 11:04
And we have to think about
11:04 – 11:07
applying it every year until
11:07 – 11:09
our soil has demonstrated the
11:09 – 11:12
ability to hold on to boron and
11:12 – 11:13
for it not to leach, which is a
11:13 – 11:14
reflection of soil fungal
11:14 – 11:15
populations.
11:18 – 11:20
My rule of thumb for boron
11:20 – 11:20
applications,
11:21 – 11:23
it is relative to rainfall and
11:24 – 11:25
relative to soil calcium levels.
11:26 – 11:27
So relative to rainfall,
11:28 – 11:29
our rule of thumb is that you
11:29 – 11:31
need a half a pound of actual
11:31 – 11:33
boron per acre per 10 inches of
11:33 – 11:34
rainfall per year.
11:35 – 11:37
So if you're in a 40 -inch
11:37 – 11:38
rainfall environment,
11:39 – 11:41
that means you need two pounds
11:41 – 11:42
of actual boron.
11:42 – 11:44
That is the quantity of boron
11:44 – 11:45
that the
11:45 – 11:47
rainfall is going to leach out
11:47 – 11:48
of the soil if
11:49 – 11:50
you do nothing.
11:50 – 11:51
Does that track so far?
11:52 – 11:54
So to your original question,
11:57 – 11:58
we've found that
11:58 – 12:01
in
12:02 – 12:03
terms of plant response, of
12:03 – 12:04
plant absorption of boron,
12:05 – 12:07
For all the various forms, we've
12:07 – 12:08
measured boric acid,
12:09 – 12:10
solubor,
12:10 – 12:12
calcium borate, sodium borate,
12:12 – 12:15
various forms. And there is a,
12:15 – 12:16
from what we've observed, there
12:16 – 12:19
is a similar release
12:19 – 12:21
response across all those
12:21 – 12:22
different types of boron where
12:22 – 12:24
we're getting peak plant
12:24 – 12:26
absorption about 45 to 60 days
12:26 – 12:26
after application.
12:28 – 12:29
And because of that, our
12:29 – 12:30
preferred application
12:31 – 12:32
If we're dealing with perennial
12:32 – 12:35
crops that are breaking dormancy
12:35 – 12:36
in the spring, and this doesn't
12:36 – 12:37
matter if it's alfalfa or tree
12:37 – 12:39
fruit or whatever the case might
12:39 – 12:39
be,
12:39 – 12:41
but that calcium supply, having
12:41 – 12:42
adequate, we often have this
12:42 – 12:44
spring lush growth, spring
12:44 – 12:45
flush.
12:45 – 12:47
And to have that spring flush be
12:47 – 12:48
at peak disease resistance,
12:49 – 12:51
peak insect resistance, we need
12:51 – 12:53
calcium to match the growth
12:53 – 12:53
flush.
12:54 – 12:55
And therefore, we need boron to
12:55 – 12:56
match the growth flush.
12:56 – 12:58
So if we put on a boron
12:58 – 12:59
application in the spring, we're
12:59 – 13:00
60 days too late.
13:01 – 13:02
Let me rephrase that.
13:02 – 13:04
If we put a boron application on
13:04 – 13:06
that is timed with the spring
13:06 – 13:07
lush,
13:07 – 13:08
it's 60 days too late.
13:09 – 13:10
So for
13:10 – 13:11
a lot of these perennial crops,
13:11 – 13:14
we're finding our best responses
13:14 – 13:16
come from putting on a soil
13:16 – 13:18
application of boron
13:18 – 13:21
minimum of 45 to 60 days
13:21 – 13:24
before we get spring dormancy
13:24 – 13:25
break.
13:25 – 13:26
And that can even happen as
13:26 – 13:28
early as fall. You can do it 90
13:28 – 13:29
days or 100 days in advance.
13:30 – 13:32
And that's when we get the peak
13:32 – 13:33
response in terms of calcium
13:33 – 13:35
absorption and in terms of boron
13:35 – 13:36
absorption into the crop.
13:37 – 13:38
Did that answer your question?
13:45 – 13:47
The boron application rate is
13:47 – 13:50
one half pound of actual boron
13:50 – 13:50
per
13:51 – 13:52
10 inches of rainfall.
13:54 – 13:55
Yes.
13:56 – 13:57
So how often do you recommend
13:57 – 13:59
that we sound test corn fields
13:59 – 14:00
throughout the throwing season?
14:00 – 14:01
And secondly,
14:02 – 14:03
what the problem, based on what
14:03 – 14:05
you see on the sound test,
14:05 – 14:06
What is going to be the most
14:06 – 14:08
difficult to change in a foliar
14:08 – 14:09
application?
14:10 – 14:11
Alright,
14:13 – 14:13
two very good questions.
14:14 – 14:15
So the first question is how
14:15 – 14:16
frequently do I recommend the
14:16 – 14:18
use of sap analysis on a corn
14:18 – 14:18
crop, for example?
14:19 – 14:20
And the second question
14:20 – 14:21
is
14:22 – 14:24
what nutrients do I find the
14:24 – 14:26
most difficult to move with a
14:26 – 14:27
foliar application?
14:27 – 14:28
Did I capture that accurately?
14:29 – 14:30
Yeah.
14:30 – 14:31
So
14:31 – 14:33
to the first question,
14:33 – 14:35
there are two answers.
14:36 – 14:40
The one answer is a desire to
14:40 – 14:41
learn about your crop
14:41 – 14:43
and how it actually moves
14:43 – 14:44
nutrients around during the
14:44 – 14:45
growing season
14:45 – 14:46
every 14 days.
14:47 – 14:49
The second answer is
14:49 – 14:51
what's the minimum needed to
14:51 – 14:54
make agronomic recommendations.
14:55 – 14:57
And I would say the minimum on a
14:57 – 14:58
corn crop is about three
14:58 – 14:59
and
15:00 – 15:01
ideally
15:02 – 15:03
I would suggest doing it about
15:03 – 15:05
every 7 to 10 days,
15:05 – 15:07
however much time you need for
15:07 – 15:07
turnaround time.
15:07 – 15:09
Let's say every 10 days before
15:09 – 15:11
you intend to make a foliar
15:11 – 15:11
application.
15:12 – 15:14
That's when you get the peak.
15:14 – 15:16
That's the most practical, from
15:16 – 15:17
a practical application
15:17 – 15:18
perspective, that's the optimal
15:18 – 15:19
timing.
15:21 – 15:23
And then in terms of getting
15:23 – 15:24
nutrients to move.
15:26 – 15:27
the,
15:29 – 15:30
I'd say one of the most
15:30 – 15:31
difficult things to get to move
15:31 – 15:32
generally
15:32 – 15:34
is getting excess of chloride
15:34 – 15:35
levels to go down.
15:37 – 15:38
In
15:39 – 15:41
terms of having, in terms of
15:41 – 15:42
having low levels of nutrients
15:42 – 15:45
and getting them to increase,
15:46 – 15:46
we
15:48 – 15:49
don't have,
15:49 – 15:50
this
15:52 – 15:53
is an interesting conundrum
15:53 – 15:53
question,
15:53 – 15:55
because I can answer it in the
15:55 – 15:56
context of our experience at AEA
15:56 – 15:57
or outside of AEA.
15:57 – 15:58
So let me say it this way.
15:58 – 15:59
When
15:59 – 16:01
we first started using SAP
16:01 – 16:02
analysis in 2011,
16:03 – 16:06
We quickly discovered that the
16:06 – 16:07
trace mineral products that we
16:07 – 16:08
were using at the time, and we
16:08 – 16:10
were using manganese sulfate and
16:10 – 16:13
zinc sulfate and so forth, using
16:13 – 16:14
sulfates that we were blending
16:14 – 16:16
with fulvic acids and organic
16:16 – 16:17
acids and amino acids.
16:18 – 16:20
And we quickly discovered that
16:20 – 16:21
the materials we were using at
16:21 – 16:23
that point were not moving the
16:23 – 16:24
needle.
16:23 – 16:25
They just simply were not being
16:25 – 16:26
effective at increasing,
16:26 – 16:28
specifically zinc, manganese,
16:28 – 16:29
copper, cobalt.
16:32 – 16:33
And
16:33 – 16:34
Today,
16:35 – 16:36
so that led to the development
16:36 – 16:39
of the rebound line of trace
16:39 – 16:39
minerals,
16:40 – 16:41
which is, the rebound line of
16:41 – 16:44
trace minerals has three
16:44 – 16:45
important characteristics.
16:46 – 16:47
One is they're chelated.
16:48 – 16:49
Second,
16:50 – 16:51
in the case of the metals,
16:51 – 16:52
they're all in the reduced form,
16:52 – 16:53
they're in the correct oxidation
16:53 – 16:54
state.
16:54 – 16:55
And third,
16:56 – 16:58
as far as I know, I'm not aware
16:58 – 16:59
of other chelated products that
16:59 – 17:01
exist that have this
17:01 – 17:01
characteristic.
17:02 – 17:03
They
17:03 – 17:04
have the ability,
17:05 – 17:07
when they're applied to the
17:07 – 17:07
leaf,
17:08 – 17:09
to move down into the root
17:09 – 17:10
system.
17:10 – 17:11
So even if you have a typical
17:11 – 17:12
chelate,
17:13 – 17:14
it's very common for most
17:14 – 17:16
chelates to remain in the upper
17:16 – 17:17
parts of the plant.
17:17 – 17:18
So if you put on a zinc chelate
17:18 – 17:19
or a manganese chelate, for
17:19 – 17:20
example, it's very common for
17:20 – 17:21
that. It can move
17:22 – 17:25
from the leaf into
17:25 – 17:26
fruit,
17:26 – 17:28
but it doesn't really move from
17:28 – 17:29
the leaf down to the root
17:29 – 17:30
system, which is very important
17:30 – 17:32
if you are dealing with any root
17:32 – 17:33
diseases or soil -borne
17:33 – 17:34
diseases. Getting those
17:34 – 17:35
nutrients down to the root
17:35 – 17:35
system is very critical.
17:38 – 17:39
So in
17:40 – 17:41
our experience with our rebound
17:41 – 17:42
trace minerals,
17:42 – 17:43
getting the trace minerals to
17:43 – 17:45
move is very easy and very
17:45 – 17:46
consistent and very reliable.
17:47 – 17:48
And outside of that,
17:48 – 17:49
it's proven to be very
17:49 – 17:50
challenging
17:51 – 17:52
to
17:53 – 17:55
the point where we're often
17:55 – 17:56
asked to,
17:57 – 17:59
and we do a lot of consulting
17:59 – 18:01
work internationally in areas
18:01 – 18:03
where growers don't have access
18:03 – 18:04
to our products.
18:04 – 18:06
And so we're just doing paid
18:06 – 18:07
consulting work and making
18:07 – 18:08
recommendations.
18:09 – 18:10
And
18:10 – 18:12
those experiences are sometimes
18:12 – 18:14
very frustrating for us because
18:14 – 18:16
We have expectations of being
18:16 – 18:17
able to put a product on and see
18:17 – 18:18
the needle move and get a
18:18 – 18:19
proportional crop response.
18:20 – 18:21
And we have a very difficult
18:21 – 18:22
time replicating that with
18:22 – 18:23
products that are available in
18:23 – 18:24
the local marketplace.
18:25 – 18:25
So,
18:25 – 18:28
that's the answer to your
18:28 – 18:29
question.
18:29 – 18:30
Let me see,
18:31 – 18:31
what was the second question?
18:41 – 18:44
At what time of day am I wasting
18:44 – 18:45
my time on those foliar jobs?
18:45 – 18:46
For example, should it be
18:46 – 18:47
beginning on the 17th?
18:47 – 18:49
Should I put
18:49 – 18:52
a
18:52 – 18:55
urea liquor with the foliar?
18:55 – 18:56
You
18:58 – 18:59
want to have a class on foliar
18:59 – 19:00
applications?
19:00 – 19:01
Maybe we need to.
19:02 – 19:03
Very good questions.
19:03 – 19:04
So the questions were what are
19:04 – 19:05
optimal time of day for
19:05 – 19:06
application?
19:07 – 19:09
Do we need to put on urea liquor
19:09 – 19:10
with every application?
19:11 – 19:12
What is optimal design?
19:14 – 19:14
Well,
19:15 – 19:16
prior to this week, if you would
19:16 – 19:17
have asked me about optimal
19:17 – 19:18
design for,
19:18 – 19:20
or optimal timing for foliar
19:20 – 19:21
applications on corn, I would
19:21 – 19:22
have said
19:22 – 19:24
with a very high degree of
19:24 – 19:26
confidence that the
19:27 – 19:28
optimal timing
19:28 – 19:31
is late in the day, in the
19:31 – 19:32
evening.
19:33 – 19:33
The
19:34 – 19:36
objective is to try to keep
19:36 – 19:38
those foliar spray droplets
19:38 – 19:39
liquid on the leaf surface as
19:39 – 19:40
long as possible.
19:41 – 19:43
So in nighttime when you have a
19:44 – 19:46
higher humidity usually, a lower
19:46 – 19:47
dew point usually,
19:48 – 19:49
is
19:49 – 19:51
when you can keep that liquid,
19:52 – 19:53
that droplet liquid on the leaf
19:53 – 19:54
surface for the longest period
19:54 – 19:55
of time.
19:55 – 19:57
And to partially answer your one
19:57 – 19:58
other question,
19:59 – 20:00
For people who are not familiar,
20:01 – 20:02
I taught this webinar, it's on
20:02 – 20:03
YouTube,
20:03 – 20:04
a number of years ago already,
20:04 – 20:06
where I spoke about this one
20:06 – 20:07
factor in foliar applications
20:07 – 20:08
that is referred to as the point
20:08 – 20:09
of deliquescence.
20:10 – 20:11
And the point of deliquescence
20:11 – 20:12
is a term that everyone should
20:12 – 20:13
be familiar with, but most of us
20:13 – 20:14
aren't.
20:14 – 20:17
And it's very simply, it is
20:17 – 20:19
a measurement
20:20 – 20:22
of a fluid material's ability to
20:22 – 20:24
be hydroscopic and to pull
20:24 – 20:25
moisture to it from the
20:25 – 20:26
atmosphere.
20:26 – 20:28
So the point of deliquescence is
20:28 – 20:29
a reflection of where is the
20:29 – 20:30
humidity threshold in the
20:30 – 20:32
atmosphere at which this
20:33 – 20:35
spray droplet will remain
20:35 – 20:36
liquid.
20:37 – 20:39
And adding hydroscopic
20:39 – 20:40
materials,
20:40 – 20:42
which urea is one,
20:43 – 20:45
or calcium nitrate, or potassium
20:45 – 20:46
nitrate, adding those types of
20:46 – 20:49
materials to a spray solution
20:50 – 20:51
In relatively small amounts,
20:52 – 20:54
urea can be included,
20:55 – 20:56
if I recall correctly, in as
20:56 – 20:58
little as 2 % of the spray
20:58 – 20:59
solution.
20:59 – 21:01
And that will give you an
21:01 – 21:02
elevated point of deliquescence
21:02 – 21:03
to the point where that liquid
21:03 – 21:05
will stay, that droplet will
21:05 – 21:06
remain liquid on the leaf
21:06 – 21:07
surface for a long period of
21:07 – 21:08
time. So it absolutely is
21:08 – 21:09
valuable to add those into the
21:09 – 21:10
spray solution.
21:12 – 21:13
And I
21:15 – 21:16
think it was on Monday here, or
21:16 – 21:17
maybe yesterday,
21:18 – 21:19
I had a conversation with a
21:19 – 21:20
grower who has
21:22 – 21:22
been doing lots of foliar
21:22 – 21:23
applications
21:24 – 21:27
of urea and other products with
21:27 – 21:28
drone applications.
21:29 – 21:31
And they found a 10 bushel per
21:31 – 21:33
acre yield difference between
21:33 – 21:35
evening applied and morning
21:35 – 21:36
applied foliar applications.
21:37 – 21:38
And the morning application
21:39 – 21:40
produced
21:40 – 21:42
the highest response.
21:42 – 21:43
The evening application had a
21:43 – 21:44
lower response than the morning
21:44 – 21:45
application,
21:45 – 21:46
which is not what I would have
21:46 – 21:48
expected. And I want to dig
21:48 – 21:49
deeper into that case.
21:49 – 21:51
I want to understand what was
21:51 – 21:52
the humidity,
21:52 – 21:53
what was dew like, what were
21:53 – 21:54
other things going on.
21:54 – 21:55
And because that,
21:56 – 21:57
first
21:58 – 22:00
of all, that experience is
22:00 – 22:02
different from what I would have
22:02 – 22:03
expected and what we've observed
22:03 – 22:04
in other cases.
22:04 – 22:05
And the
22:06 – 22:08
caveat to that is that we don't
22:08 – 22:09
have a lot of people who've
22:09 – 22:11
actually measured the results.
22:11 – 22:14
We look at visual observation,
22:14 – 22:15
but we don't have a lot of
22:15 – 22:15
measurements.
22:15 – 22:16
So here's someone who's actually
22:16 – 22:17
done the measurement.
22:18 – 22:20
So now, we need to evaluate and
22:20 – 22:22
find out what was actually
22:22 – 22:23
happening and going on there.
22:23 – 22:24
Did I answer all of your
22:24 – 22:25
questions?
22:27 – 22:28
All right.
22:27 – 22:28
Yes.
22:40 – 22:41
Art, you love asking the
22:41 – 22:42
provocative questions, don't
22:42 – 22:43
you?
22:43 – 22:45
So the question was, what water
22:45 – 22:46
are you using for your Foliar
22:46 – 22:47
spray quality?
22:48 – 22:49
And water quality is absolutely
22:49 – 22:50
fundamental.
22:52 – 22:53
You can have
22:53 – 22:54
you can have foliar applications
22:54 – 22:56
with the exact same amounts of
22:56 – 22:58
nutrients and put them in clean
22:58 – 23:00
water and produce a very strong,
23:00 – 23:01
very beneficial crop response,
23:01 – 23:03
put them in dirty water and get
23:03 – 23:04
zero response. And when I say
23:04 – 23:06
dirty water, I'm not talking
23:06 – 23:08
about physically observable
23:08 – 23:09
muddy water.
23:09 – 23:10
I'm talking specifically about
23:10 – 23:11
water that has high levels of
23:11 – 23:12
carbonates or bicarbonates.
23:12 – 23:14
And so from my perspective,
23:15 – 23:16
there are
23:17 – 23:18
essentially
23:20 – 23:22
three sources that
23:23 – 23:23
are possible.
23:24 – 23:25
One, you can use rainwater.
23:27 – 23:28
Two,
23:28 – 23:29
you can use reverse osmosis
23:29 – 23:30
water.
23:31 – 23:33
Three, you can use water that
23:34 – 23:36
has been tested and measured and
23:36 – 23:37
is known to be clean.
23:39 – 23:40
And I don't want to have any
23:40 – 23:41
follow -up questions from people
23:41 – 23:42
asking me, well, hey, can I use
23:42 – 23:43
well water? Can I use pond
23:43 – 23:44
water? Can I use river water?
23:44 – 23:45
Can I use stream water?
23:45 – 23:46
It's very simple.
23:46 – 23:47
You have to test it and know
23:47 – 23:48
that it's clean,
23:49 – 23:50
because I can't speculate.
23:56 – 23:58
Reverse osmosis units
23:58 – 24:01
pay significant dividends in
24:01 – 24:02
foliar applications.
24:02 – 24:02
If you're doing foliar
24:02 – 24:04
applications, a reverse osmosis
24:04 – 24:05
unit in most
24:06 – 24:07
regions of the soil, most
24:07 – 24:08
regions of the country, unless
24:08 – 24:09
you have the ability to access
24:09 – 24:11
rainwater in large enough
24:11 – 24:11
amounts,
24:12 – 24:13
a reverse osmosis unit pays for
24:13 – 24:14
itself very quickly and improve
24:14 – 24:15
product performance and improve
24:15 – 24:16
prop performance.
24:17 – 24:19
They're very, very necessary and
24:19 – 24:20
very valuable devices.
24:20 – 24:21
The next question that someone
24:21 – 24:22
is about to ask is, what about
24:22 – 24:23
water structuring devices?
24:25 – 24:26
There are,
24:27 – 24:28
I've had this conversation a
24:28 – 24:29
hundred times or two, you see.
24:32 – 24:33
There are
24:34 – 24:35
many water structuring devices
24:35 – 24:36
on the marketplace.
24:37 – 24:39
A few of them,
24:39 – 24:40
are quite effective.
24:42 – 24:44
And I would point people to, I
24:44 – 24:46
don't know if Steve Divers spoke
24:46 – 24:47
yesterday, I think he's speaking
24:47 – 24:48
today.
24:48 – 24:49
If you're interested in water
24:49 – 24:50
structuring devices and
24:50 – 24:52
technology, I would encourage
24:52 – 24:53
you to speak to Steve because
24:53 – 24:56
many, many folks
24:56 – 24:57
have
24:57 – 25:00
theoretical conversations
25:01 – 25:03
Steve has actually tested many
25:03 – 25:05
different devices and tested
25:06 – 25:06
their,
25:07 – 25:08
the crop response that they
25:08 – 25:09
produce.
25:10 – 25:12
And he actually knows which are
25:12 – 25:13
effective and which are not.
25:13 – 25:15
So I would defer to Steve for
25:15 – 25:15
that conversation.
25:16 – 25:17
All right, we had another
25:17 – 25:18
question over here somewhere.
25:20 – 25:21
Not anymore.
25:21 – 25:22
You're
25:40 – 25:41
referring to the timing of the
25:41 – 25:42
foliar application response.
25:44 – 25:45
So this gentleman was just
25:45 – 25:46
referring to
25:47 – 25:49
possibly corn might produce a
25:49 – 25:50
larger
25:50 – 25:52
response
25:52 – 25:53
from a morning application
25:53 – 25:54
versus
25:55 – 25:58
a fall application in a drought
25:58 – 25:59
-stressed environment where you
25:59 – 26:01
have stomatal opening limited
26:01 – 26:02
mostly to the morning hours
26:02 – 26:03
instead of to the evening hours?
26:03 – 26:04
Am I understanding correctly or
26:04 – 26:05
interpreting correctly?
26:15 – 26:16
Yeah, so,
26:17 – 26:18
and
26:19 – 26:21
the follow -up clarification was
26:21 – 26:23
on what
26:23 – 26:24
is the,
26:25 – 26:26
that corn has a different
26:26 – 26:27
stomatal arrangement on the leaf
26:27 – 26:30
than a lot of other plants do.
26:32 – 26:34
The caveat that I would offer is
26:34 – 26:35
that the majority of nutrient
26:35 – 26:36
absorption through
26:37 – 26:38
the leaf is not through the
26:38 – 26:39
stomata.
26:40 – 26:41
In fact,
26:41 – 26:42
very limited levels.
26:43 – 26:45
If anyone tries to sell you a
26:45 – 26:46
story
26:46 – 26:48
that nutrients absorption, they
26:48 – 26:50
have a micronized calcium
26:50 – 26:51
carbonate product or something
26:51 – 26:52
like that, that is being
26:52 – 26:53
absorbed through the stomata,
26:53 – 26:54
that's a bunch of bologna.
26:55 – 26:57
because stomata represent,
26:57 – 26:59
I don't know, less than 1 % of
26:59 – 27:00
the surface area of a leaf.
27:03 – 27:05
So what actually happens,
27:06 – 27:08
what should happen, what can
27:08 – 27:09
happen, there is,
27:10 – 27:11
of course, ionic diffusion that
27:11 – 27:13
happens when you have soluble
27:13 – 27:14
ions and soluble products,
27:15 – 27:15
chelates and so forth.
27:16 – 27:20
But what an underappreciated
27:20 – 27:23
mechanism is that we have a
27:23 – 27:25
very active microbial population
27:25 – 27:28
on the leaf surface that will
27:28 – 27:30
absorb nutrients and transfer it
27:30 – 27:32
into the leaf in much the same
27:32 – 27:33
way as what happens in the soil
27:33 – 27:34
microbiome.
27:34 – 27:36
So we should be thinking about
27:36 – 27:38
the leaf microbiome similar to
27:38 – 27:38
what we're thinking about the
27:38 – 27:39
soil microbiome.
27:39 – 27:40
And a lot of the products that
27:40 – 27:41
we're applying
27:42 – 27:43
are actually absorbed by
27:43 – 27:45
microbes and then transferred
27:45 – 27:46
into plants, particularly if
27:46 – 27:47
we're putting on dry powder
27:47 – 27:49
products like powdered calcium
27:49 – 27:50
carbonate or something like
27:50 – 27:51
that.
27:51 – 27:52
So that doesn't reduce their
27:52 – 27:53
effectiveness,
27:53 – 27:55
but it means that they can have
27:55 – 27:56
a delayed effectiveness where
27:56 – 27:59
the peak effect might occur 24
27:59 – 28:01
to 48 hours later instead of 4
28:01 – 28:02
to 6 hours if you're applying
28:02 – 28:03
urea or something like that.
28:04 – 28:05
Yes, Helen.
28:08 – 28:10
trying to understand how the
28:10 – 28:12
foliar applications that we did
28:12 – 28:14
at Blue for perennials work, I
28:14 – 28:16
totally agree with doing more on
28:16 – 28:18
it and why we were able to stop
28:18 – 28:20
spraying that with some peaches.
28:20 – 28:22
But once we discovered the
28:22 – 28:24
native yeast on the leaves,
28:25 – 28:26
trying to figure that out,
28:28 – 28:31
I still don't quite get it.
28:31 – 28:33
But I know that there's an
28:33 – 28:33
interaction.
28:34 – 28:35
Do you think that you could have
28:35 – 28:37
been predictive about,
28:37 – 28:38
OK, I'm going to ask Dippo.
28:39 – 28:41
about particular microbial
28:41 – 28:44
communities in the leaf surface,
28:45 – 28:46
foliar
28:47 – 28:48
application,
28:49 – 28:50
and time. can
28:52 – 28:54
you can you ask me that question
28:54 – 28:55
again
28:55 – 28:57
that last sentence can you
28:57 – 28:58
compress that last sentence
28:58 – 28:59
again
29:03 – 29:05
applications on inverts.
29:05 – 29:08
And notice different efficacy in
29:08 – 29:12
terms of both yield and in
29:12 – 29:15
terms of particularly disease
29:15 – 29:16
suppression.
29:16 – 29:17
Yeah. And not so much insect
29:17 – 29:19
suppression, but definitely
29:19 – 29:22
disease suppression with things
29:22 – 29:25
like boron and other
29:25 – 29:26
micronutrients in our mineral
29:26 – 29:27
mix, right? Yeah.
29:28 – 29:30
Once we discovered and tried to
29:30 – 29:31
understand
29:32 – 29:34
the microbial leaf community
29:34 – 29:36
pulled out a geist,
29:36 – 29:38
which turned out to be,
29:38 – 29:39
ironically,
29:39 – 29:40
oracy.
29:40 – 29:41
But could
29:43 – 29:44
you be predictive?
29:45 – 29:46
I'm sorry, I'm talking with my
29:46 – 29:47
hands.
29:47 – 29:48
Could you be predictive about
29:48 – 29:49
that and say,
29:50 – 29:52
if one leaf microbial population
29:52 – 29:55
is leaning this way,
29:56 – 29:57
I can,
29:58 – 29:59
I have the options of doing
29:59 – 30:00
that?
30:05 – 30:06
all of that question to the
30:06 – 30:07
audience.
30:07 – 30:09
But the question was,
30:10 – 30:12
so Helen Athow is asking the
30:12 – 30:13
question. She's the author of
30:13 – 30:14
the book,
30:14 – 30:15
what is it, The Ecological
30:15 – 30:15
Farmer?
30:16 – 30:17
I
30:17 – 30:19
really enjoyed the conversations
30:19 – 30:19
that I had with her on the
30:19 – 30:20
podcast.
30:20 – 30:22
And the observation that she's
30:22 – 30:24
relaying is that when they were
30:24 – 30:26
growing organic tree fruit, they
30:26 – 30:29
observed variable responses to
30:29 – 30:30
foliar applications of nutrients
30:30 – 30:32
relative to disease suppression
30:33 – 30:34
based on what was happening
30:34 – 30:36
within the plant microbiome, on
30:36 – 30:36
the leaf microbiome.
30:37 – 30:38
Did I capture that correctly?
30:38 – 30:39
Yeah, awesome.
30:40 – 30:41
And her question is,
30:42 – 30:44
how can we manage that
30:44 – 30:45
proactively?
30:47 – 30:47
All right,
30:49 – 30:50
this is such a fun conversation.
30:51 – 30:52
So I
30:57 – 30:59
should back up just a bit
31:00 – 31:03
to expand on one of the previous
31:03 – 31:04
points that I made about boron,
31:04 – 31:05
because it's going to tie into
31:05 – 31:06
this discussion.
31:09 – 31:11
Boron, if there is any nutrient
31:11 – 31:12
that
31:13 – 31:15
has the most, the nutrient that
31:15 – 31:17
has the most direct correlation
31:17 – 31:19
to brix levels in plants is
31:19 – 31:20
boron.
31:21 – 31:22
If you want to increase a
31:22 – 31:23
plant's BRX reading,
31:24 – 31:25
about
31:26 – 31:27
80 % of the time,
31:28 – 31:29
simply putting on a boron
31:29 – 31:30
application is going to
31:30 – 31:31
dramatically increase the BRX
31:31 – 31:32
reading. And I'm talking,
31:33 – 31:33
it'll take
31:33 – 31:36
sugars from 2s and 3s up to 8s
31:36 – 31:36
and 10s.
31:37 – 31:39
most of the time, but not
31:39 – 31:40
always.
31:40 – 31:42
And the reason it doesn't do it
31:42 – 31:43
always is because in order for
31:43 – 31:44
it to have that effect,
31:44 – 31:45
some of the other foundational
31:45 – 31:47
pieces have to be in place as
31:47 – 31:48
well. You have to have adequate
31:48 – 31:48
calcium levels.
31:48 – 31:49
You have to have adequate
31:49 – 31:50
manganese levels.
31:50 – 31:51
Boron by itself isn't a silver
31:51 – 31:53
bullet, but it is very closely
31:53 – 31:55
associated with elevated Briggs
31:55 – 31:55
readings.
31:56 – 31:57
And so from an insect management
31:57 – 31:58
perspective,
31:59 – 32:00
it's become very clear.
32:00 – 32:01
I have
32:01 – 32:03
tremendous respect and
32:03 – 32:04
appreciation for Tom Dykstra's
32:04 – 32:05
work.
32:05 – 32:07
on the association of brix
32:07 – 32:08
readings with insect
32:08 – 32:08
susceptibility.
32:08 – 32:10
In our experience, we've found
32:10 – 32:11
it to be a little bit more
32:11 – 32:13
multidimensional than just brix
32:13 – 32:13
readings alone.
32:14 – 32:15
It's the combination of both
32:15 – 32:16
having higher brix readings and
32:16 – 32:18
having lower levels of soluble
32:18 – 32:20
nitrogen compounds, soluble
32:20 – 32:21
nitrates and ammonium in the
32:21 – 32:22
plant sap. When you have the
32:22 – 32:23
combination of those two things,
32:24 – 32:25
your insect pressure
32:25 – 32:26
just vanishes.
32:27 – 32:28
It's gone. And I'm talking about
32:28 – 32:30
very difficult to manage insects
32:30 – 32:32
such as codling moth and
32:32 – 32:35
Japanese beetles and Colorado
32:35 – 32:36
potato beetles.
32:36 – 32:37
The list goes on and on.
32:37 – 32:38
It becomes a lot of fun.
32:38 – 32:39
You can manage insects very
32:39 – 32:40
effectively. by managing this.
32:41 – 32:43
So I talked about boron and its
32:43 – 32:45
impact on BRICS readings because
32:45 – 32:46
of
32:47 – 32:48
how this translates to this
32:48 – 32:50
conversation about managing
32:50 – 32:51
diseases on the leaf surface.
32:52 – 32:53
So we
32:55 – 32:56
have to start thinking about the
32:56 – 32:58
microbiome on the leaf surface
32:58 – 33:00
much the same way and
33:00 – 33:02
functioning in much the same way
33:02 – 33:03
as the microbiome in the soil.
33:04 – 33:05
And what do the microbes on the
33:05 – 33:06
leaf surface need?
33:06 – 33:07
They need a food source.
33:08 – 33:08
They need sugar.
33:09 – 33:10
and they get sugars,
33:11 – 33:12
mostly,
33:12 – 33:13
when plants have higher Brix
33:13 – 33:14
readings. When you have an
33:14 – 33:15
elevated Brix reading,
33:16 – 33:17
as a reflection,
33:17 – 33:18
I'll say,
33:19 – 33:20
of an elevated boron content,
33:21 – 33:22
you get much more sugar
33:23 – 33:24
being transmitted to the
33:24 – 33:25
microbial community on the leaf
33:25 – 33:27
surface, and therefore you get a
33:27 – 33:28
much larger microbial community
33:28 – 33:29
on the leaf surface.
33:29 – 33:30
And I was having this
33:30 – 33:31
interesting conversation
33:31 – 33:33
yesterday with a microbiome
33:34 – 33:37
researcher who said something to
33:37 – 33:38
the effect of,
33:38 – 33:39
when you provide an abundant
33:39 – 33:40
food source, the good guys
33:40 – 33:41
always win.
33:44 – 33:45
And I found that fasting, I
33:45 – 33:46
hadn't thought of it in quite
33:46 – 33:47
those terms, but I found that to
33:47 – 33:48
be generally true.
33:48 – 33:50
When you provide an abundant
33:50 – 33:51
food source,
33:51 – 33:52
the good guys always win.
33:53 – 33:54
So
33:54 – 33:55
this
33:57 – 33:58
leads me to,
33:58 – 34:00
I can't not have a conversation
34:00 – 34:02
about pinyon in this context
34:02 – 34:03
because the setup is just too
34:03 – 34:04
good.
34:05 – 34:06
So this,
34:10 – 34:12
15 years ago, I got to work on a
34:12 – 34:13
project
34:13 – 34:15
where I wanted to develop
34:16 – 34:16
a
34:17 – 34:20
biocontrol product that
34:20 – 34:22
had an effect
34:23 – 34:26
on the plant microbiome and
34:26 – 34:26
would produce
34:26 – 34:30
systemic
34:30 – 34:31
disease
34:32 – 34:34
resistance as a reflection of
34:34 – 34:36
changing or improving the
34:36 – 34:37
overall plant microbiome.
34:37 – 34:38
I had a lot of fun with that
34:38 – 34:39
project.
34:39 – 34:40
Other things became a priority.
34:41 – 34:42
It ended up sitting on the shelf
34:42 – 34:43
for over a decade.
34:44 – 34:45
Two years ago we started working
34:45 – 34:47
on that project again
34:48 – 34:48
and
34:49 – 34:51
we did some preliminary testing
34:51 – 34:54
in the 2024 growing season that
34:54 – 34:55
kind of
34:56 – 34:57
really
34:57 – 34:58
blew my mind,
34:59 – 35:00
exceeded my expectations by
35:00 – 35:01
quite some distance.
35:01 – 35:03
And I'll tell you, one of the
35:03 – 35:06
very first crops that we
35:06 – 35:08
applied it on was a newly
35:08 – 35:09
planted vineyard in Virginia.
35:10 – 35:11
So these were year -old
35:11 – 35:12
seedlings,
35:13 – 35:14
and actually,
35:15 – 35:16
I shouldn't say year -old
35:16 – 35:17
seedlings. This was the first
35:17 – 35:19
leaf, first year after they had
35:19 – 35:20
been planted, their first
35:20 – 35:21
growing season.
35:21 – 35:24
And there had been a six -week
35:24 – 35:26
period on this operation.
35:26 – 35:29
It was about 130 acres or so of
35:29 – 35:29
newly planted vines.
35:30 – 35:31
They had a six -week period of
35:31 – 35:33
continuous rainfall, high
35:33 – 35:34
humidity, cloud cover,
35:34 – 35:36
and powdery mildew and downy
35:36 – 35:38
mildew was just decimating the
35:38 – 35:39
plants.
35:39 – 35:41
So we put on an application of
35:41 – 35:42
this product. It was a test
35:42 – 35:43
product at the time.
35:43 – 35:44
It's now the product that we
35:44 – 35:44
call Pinion.
35:45 – 35:47
Put on one foliar application at
35:47 – 35:48
an application rate of two
35:48 – 35:48
quarts per acre,
35:49 – 35:51
and the disease stopped in its
35:51 – 35:52
tracks. It just, there was a,
35:53 – 35:54
it was a hard break point.
35:58 – 35:59
And if you're familiar with
35:59 – 36:03
downy mildew, it can cause, once
36:03 – 36:04
an infection, even when an
36:04 – 36:06
infection has stopped, if it's
36:06 – 36:07
already established itself and
36:07 – 36:08
colonized,
36:08 – 36:10
it will cause that part of the
36:10 – 36:11
leaf that it infected to die
36:11 – 36:13
out, to turn brown, to break
36:13 – 36:14
out. And so what ended up
36:14 – 36:16
happening is these plants ended
36:16 – 36:19
up losing over 80 % of their
36:19 – 36:21
leaf surface area, because all
36:21 – 36:23
of these infected spots dropped
36:23 – 36:24
down, the leaves were very
36:24 – 36:25
skeletonized.
36:25 – 36:28
So with that one application,
36:29 – 36:31
I found that the end of that
36:31 – 36:32
growing season, another two
36:32 – 36:34
months or so later, these plants
36:34 – 36:36
had anywhere from four to six
36:36 – 36:37
feet of new vine growth,
36:38 – 36:40
but it wasn't the quantity of
36:40 – 36:41
vine growth that
36:41 – 36:42
was impressive.
36:42 – 36:43
That was impressive, but what
36:43 – 36:44
was exceptionally impressive and
36:44 – 36:46
what really caught my attention
36:46 – 36:48
was that all of these leaves had
36:48 – 36:49
this thick,
36:50 – 36:50
glossy,
36:50 – 36:52
waxy sheen on the leaf surface.
36:52 – 36:54
They hadn't had it before that,
36:54 – 36:55
and they had it after that
36:55 – 36:56
application and going forward,
36:57 – 37:00
So this was only one
37:00 – 37:02
application, one spot at a time,
37:02 – 37:05
and it protected that plant for
37:05 – 37:06
the rest of the growing season.
37:07 – 37:09
That really caught my attention.
37:10 – 37:12
So as of this point, I'll just
37:12 – 37:13
flash forward to today.
37:13 – 37:15
We've now also tested it
37:15 – 37:17
extensively in 2025 growing
37:17 – 37:19
season. It's now registered as a
37:19 – 37:22
class 25B biocontrol product for
37:22 – 37:24
disease and for both bacterial
37:24 – 37:25
and fungal control in about, I
37:25 – 37:26
think it's currently registered
37:26 – 37:27
in about 30 states and the rest
37:27 – 37:28
are in progress.
37:30 – 37:32
As of this point, we've tested
37:32 – 37:33
it on close to three dozen
37:33 – 37:35
different disease and crop
37:35 – 37:37
combinations, both a few
37:37 – 37:38
bacterial diseases, but mostly
37:38 – 37:39
fungal diseases.
37:39 – 37:40
And it has outperformed
37:40 – 37:42
conventional fungicides in every
37:42 – 37:43
application,
37:43 – 37:44
every time that it's been tried.
37:45 – 37:46
And in
37:47 – 37:48
most of the applications, not
37:48 – 37:49
all, but in most of the
37:49 – 37:50
applications,
37:50 – 37:52
there was one or two
37:52 – 37:54
applications made at the
37:54 – 37:54
beginning of disease
37:54 – 37:56
susceptibility period, and it
37:56 – 37:57
lasted for the rest of the
37:57 – 37:58
growing season.
37:59 – 38:00
I'm pretty excited about that.
38:01 – 38:01
So
38:02 – 38:03
I want to talk about pinion,
38:03 – 38:04
just
38:04 – 38:06
its effectiveness.
38:07 – 38:09
There are three different macro
38:09 – 38:10
modes of action.
38:11 – 38:14
The first is that it has a very
38:14 – 38:15
strong reducing effect.
38:15 – 38:16
So if you're familiar with,
38:17 – 38:18
I've spoken in the past about
38:18 – 38:20
Olivier Hussain's research and
38:20 – 38:21
the paper that we published
38:21 – 38:22
where we spoke about the EHPH
38:22 – 38:25
terrain requirements of a
38:25 – 38:26
to express itself.
38:26 – 38:28
The short version is that a
38:28 – 38:30
foliar application opinion has a
38:30 – 38:32
very strong reducing effect that
38:33 – 38:34
very rapidly creates an
38:34 – 38:35
environment in which pathogens
38:35 – 38:37
can't express themselves.
38:37 – 38:39
So in terms of having a rapid,
38:39 – 38:40
immediate effect,
38:41 – 38:42
that is where that effect is
38:42 – 38:43
coming from. But the reality is
38:43 – 38:44
also that that effect doesn't
38:44 – 38:44
last very long.
38:45 – 38:46
Depends on how much oxidative
38:46 – 38:47
stress plants are under, but
38:47 – 38:48
that effect can last for as
38:48 – 38:50
little as 24 to 48 hours and
38:50 – 38:51
then it's gone.
38:53 – 38:56
The second effect is that
38:59 – 39:01
pinion stimulates.
39:01 – 39:02
It's not a food source.
39:03 – 39:04
It doesn't provide sugars,
39:04 – 39:05
doesn't provide carbon,
39:05 – 39:07
or if it does, it's incidental.
39:09 – 39:10
but it stimulates the microbiome
39:10 – 39:12
on the leaf surface to a
39:12 – 39:13
remarkable degree.
39:13 – 39:15
It's one of the most powerful
39:15 – 39:16
biostimulants that I've ever
39:16 – 39:17
observed. And I've tested many
39:17 – 39:18
over the years.
39:19 – 39:21
And so the microbiome on the
39:21 – 39:22
leaf surface changes
39:22 – 39:24
dramatically. And as nearly as
39:24 – 39:26
we can tell after this two years
39:26 – 39:27
of collecting data,
39:28 – 39:30
it stays changed for the rest of
39:30 – 39:31
the growing season.
39:32 – 39:33
And in the case of perennial
39:33 – 39:34
crops, even into the following
39:34 – 39:35
season.
39:36 – 39:38
The third effect that it has,
39:39 – 39:40
and this was one I was really
39:40 – 39:42
intrigued by this observation on
39:42 – 39:43
the grapevines,
39:45 – 39:48
it activates a number of
39:49 – 39:50
genetic immune pathways.
39:50 – 39:52
So we have mRNA activation.
39:53 – 39:55
This is an area that we still
39:55 – 39:56
need to do a lot more research
39:56 – 39:57
about. It's the area that we
39:57 – 39:58
know the least about.
39:59 – 40:00
But our
40:01 – 40:03
current understanding is that we
40:03 – 40:04
are activating
40:04 – 40:06
close to two dozen different
40:06 – 40:07
immune pathways, genetic
40:07 – 40:08
pathways,
40:08 – 40:10
and so this plant's immune
40:10 – 40:12
system just comes alive and
40:12 – 40:14
stays turned on.
40:15 – 40:16
This is the important piece.
40:16 – 40:17
So what we see happening, what
40:17 – 40:19
we saw happening with these
40:19 – 40:21
grapevines
40:23 – 40:25
is one application,
40:26 – 40:27
after the disease had been
40:27 – 40:28
present for a while,
40:28 – 40:29
triggered all of this new
40:29 – 40:31
growth, and this new growth had
40:31 – 40:32
completely different
40:32 – 40:33
characteristics from the
40:33 – 40:34
previous growth.
40:34 – 40:36
And that is an expression of a
40:36 – 40:37
change in genetic expression.
40:38 – 40:39
there was a change in genetic
40:39 – 40:41
expression as a result of immune
40:41 – 40:42
function being turned on and
40:42 – 40:43
having this glossy,
40:44 – 40:46
waxy surface on the leaves and a
40:46 – 40:48
completely different leaf
40:48 – 40:49
morphology, much more clearly
40:49 – 40:51
defined leaf edge
40:51 – 40:53
characteristics and leaf
40:53 – 40:53
serration.
40:54 – 40:56
So there were significant
40:56 – 40:58
changes in genetic expression of
40:58 – 41:00
that plant as a result of,
41:00 – 41:02
in part, I believe, of the
41:02 – 41:03
microbiome improvement.
41:05 – 41:06
Now,
41:05 – 41:07
if you think about what I just
41:07 – 41:08
said, those three different
41:08 – 41:10
modes of action, there's a very
41:10 – 41:10
important point here.
41:13 – 41:14
I am just
41:15 – 41:16
blown away, impressed with the
41:16 – 41:17
results that we've gotten from
41:17 – 41:18
Pinion so far.
41:18 – 41:20
If those level of results
41:20 – 41:21
continue into the future,
41:22 – 41:23
This is a product that can
41:23 – 41:24
replace 90 percent of fungicide
41:24 – 41:25
applications,
41:25 – 41:27
which is a very big deal because
41:27 – 41:29
fungicide applications in
41:29 – 41:31
contemporary agriculture are one
41:31 – 41:32
of the significant limiting
41:32 – 41:33
factors that are really
41:33 – 41:34
suppressing soil biology and
41:34 – 41:35
preventing systems from turning
41:35 – 41:36
around. So I'm very excited
41:36 – 41:37
about it from that perspective.
41:38 – 41:39
However,
41:39 – 41:40
we already know
41:41 – 41:41
that
41:42 – 41:44
all of the all of the modes of
41:44 – 41:46
action that I described are all
41:46 – 41:47
biological in nature,
41:48 – 41:50
which means your mileage will
41:50 – 41:51
vary.
41:53 – 41:54
Your mileage is going to vary.
41:55 – 41:56
If you have
41:56 – 41:58
different ecosystems with
41:58 – 41:59
different microbiomes and some
41:59 – 42:00
microbiomes that are much more
42:00 – 42:02
suppressed and soil microbiomes
42:02 – 42:03
that are very suppressed, you're
42:03 – 42:04
going to get a different
42:04 – 42:05
response.
42:05 – 42:08
So on some farms where one or
42:08 – 42:09
two applications might be
42:09 – 42:10
required for effective disease
42:10 – 42:11
control,
42:11 – 42:12
another operation might require
42:12 – 42:14
eight applications in the first
42:14 – 42:15
season.
42:15 – 42:16
I'm just making this up.
42:17 – 42:19
I'm just pointing this out to
42:19 – 42:20
say that there's a great deal
42:20 – 42:22
that we don't know about this
42:22 – 42:23
product.
42:23 – 42:25
What we do know is that it's
42:25 – 42:26
extremely impressive and very
42:26 – 42:27
exciting.
42:27 – 42:28
So I
42:28 – 42:29
wanted to talk about that
42:29 – 42:32
because I believe at
42:34 – 42:35
the foundation,
42:36 – 42:38
when we look at developing
42:38 – 42:38
agronomy,
42:40 – 42:41
From a biological perspective,
42:42 – 42:43
we need to have healthy,
42:44 – 42:45
vigorous, abundant soil
42:45 – 42:46
microbiomes.
42:47 – 42:47
And the
42:48 – 42:50
two greatest limiting factors
42:50 – 42:51
to,
42:51 – 42:52
what do you think are the two
42:52 – 42:53
greatest limiting factors to
42:53 – 42:54
soil biology generally on most
42:54 – 42:55
operations?
42:55 – 42:56
It's not tillage.
42:58 – 42:59
It's bare soil exposed to
42:59 – 43:00
sunlight
43:01 – 43:02
and fungicide applications.
43:04 – 43:04
Those two,
43:05 – 43:07
as far as I can determine from a
43:07 – 43:08
lot of experience and
43:08 – 43:09
observation and some data
43:09 – 43:10
collection,
43:10 – 43:12
those two have the most
43:12 – 43:13
detrimental effect on the soil
43:13 – 43:14
microbiome.
43:15 – 43:17
And having
43:17 – 43:19
bare soil exposed to the sun is
43:19 – 43:20
something that we can change
43:20 – 43:21
with
43:21 – 43:23
cover crop management, keeping
43:23 – 43:24
the soil covered and so forth.
43:25 – 43:27
But fungicide applications in a
43:27 – 43:28
transition period,
43:29 – 43:30
getting an effective replacement
43:30 – 43:31
alternative for fungicide
43:31 – 43:33
applications is a very important
43:33 – 43:34
piece. And so I'm quite excited
43:34 – 43:36
about the potential opinion.
43:38 – 43:38
So that's
43:39 – 43:40
a very long answer to your
43:40 – 43:41
question, Helen.
43:42 – 43:44
But it ties into your question
43:44 – 43:47
about the importance of mineral
43:47 – 43:48
applications because
43:49 – 43:51
The mineral foliar applications,
43:51 – 43:52
whether they be boron or
43:52 – 43:54
manganese or other elements,
43:56 – 43:57
one of the pieces that I've
43:57 – 43:58
found foundational over the
43:58 – 44:00
years is that in order for a
44:00 – 44:01
foliar application to be
44:01 – 44:02
effective at disease control,
44:03 – 44:04
it needs to be optimized or
44:04 – 44:05
needs to be balanced to increase
44:05 – 44:06
photosynthesis.
44:07 – 44:07
You do that
44:08 – 44:09
and the game changes.
44:10 – 44:12
And that's where so often the
44:12 – 44:13
boat is missed.
44:13 – 44:14
And so I'll just, I'll come back
44:14 – 44:15
again.
44:17 – 44:18
If there's two things that I
44:18 – 44:19
hope everyone does
44:20 – 44:21
following this conference,
44:23 – 44:24
I hope everyone increases their
44:24 – 44:25
boron levels,
44:25 – 44:26
and I hope everyone tries
44:26 – 44:27
pinion.
44:29 – 44:30
Because
44:30 – 44:32
I think those are the two
44:32 – 44:33
foundational pieces
44:33 – 44:34
two of the foundational pieces
44:34 – 44:35
that I've observed in the last
44:35 – 44:37
year to make significant changes
44:37 – 44:39
in how a crop responds and how a
44:39 – 44:40
crop performs.
44:40 – 44:42
And just to go back again and to
44:42 – 44:43
reiterate,
44:44 – 44:46
when we're looking at soil
44:46 – 44:47
analysis,
44:48 – 44:50
our desired levels of boron are
44:50 – 44:52
a minimum of three parts per
44:52 – 44:54
million and up to six to 10
44:54 – 44:55
parts per million.
44:56 – 44:56
And that is
44:58 – 45:00
five to 10 times higher than
45:00 – 45:01
most other common
45:01 – 45:02
recommendations.
45:02 – 45:03
But that is the threshold
45:03 – 45:04
required
45:05 – 45:06
For insect resistance, that's
45:06 – 45:08
the threshold required for high
45:08 – 45:09
BRX readings and high sugar
45:09 – 45:10
levels.
45:10 – 45:12
And that's also the threshold
45:12 – 45:13
where we see peak yield response
45:13 – 45:15
as a result of better calcium
45:15 – 45:16
metabolism.
45:17 – 45:18
All right.
45:18 – 45:19
Yes.
45:18 – 45:19
Could I give an example of
45:19 – 45:20
annual crop
45:21 – 45:22
things that you're seeing with
45:22 – 45:23
any?
45:23 – 45:24
Could I give an example?
45:24 – 45:25
You're referring to pinyon?
45:26 – 45:27
Could I give an example of
45:27 – 45:30
annual crops where we've tested?
45:30 – 45:31
Well, it's been,
45:31 – 45:33
we've tested it on onions, on
45:33 – 45:34
cantaloupe, on tomatoes.
45:35 – 45:37
Tomatoes we tested it on early
45:37 – 45:38
blight, septoria.
45:38 – 45:40
Cercospora leaf spot
45:40 – 45:41
the
45:42 – 45:43
list it's quite an extensive
45:43 – 45:46
list at this point and
45:46 – 45:48
We
45:48 – 45:50
had one application on
45:51 – 45:53
Downy and powdery mildew on a
45:53 – 45:54
cantaloupe crop
45:54 – 45:55
that
45:55 – 45:58
The grower reported back that
45:59 – 46:01
his words were that it wasn't
46:01 – 46:02
really successful,
46:02 – 46:04
but it wasn't not successful
46:04 – 46:05
because of the product, it's
46:05 – 46:07
because it was applied too late
46:07 – 46:08
and the plants had already
46:07 – 46:08
declined too far.
46:10 – 46:12
We had one application on
46:12 – 46:14
cherries. Actually, this is an
46:14 – 46:15
important point.
46:15 – 46:16
I'm glad we're having this
46:16 – 46:17
discussion.
46:17 – 46:18
We had one application, it was a
46:18 – 46:20
repeat application in cherries
46:20 – 46:23
in Utah that was less
46:23 – 46:24
successful than many of the
46:24 – 46:25
other applications we saw.
46:25 – 46:26
We still had,
46:26 – 46:28
A three times application,
46:28 – 46:30
this was very severe, very
46:30 – 46:31
intense powdery mildew pressure.
46:31 – 46:33
Three applications of pinion
46:33 – 46:36
at the conclusion of the trial
46:36 – 46:38
had 5 % less powdery mildew than
46:38 – 46:40
five applications of a
46:40 – 46:41
fungicide. So I still thought
46:41 – 46:44
that was some level of success.
46:44 – 46:45
But the reason for the more
46:45 – 46:46
limited success,
46:47 – 46:48
we believe,
46:48 – 46:52
is because we found out halfway
46:52 – 46:53
through the trial, the treatment
46:53 – 46:54
or more than halfway through,
46:54 – 46:55
that
46:55 – 46:57
the product was being tank mixed
46:57 – 46:58
with elemental sulfur,
46:58 – 46:59
powdered sulfur.
46:59 – 47:00
And so
47:00 – 47:02
one of the mechanisms or the
47:02 – 47:03
modes of action of
47:04 – 47:05
that initial 24 to 48 hour
47:05 – 47:06
strong burst is to have a very
47:06 – 47:07
strong reducing effect.
47:07 – 47:09
And you destroy that if you tank
47:09 – 47:11
mix it with an oxidizer, which
47:11 – 47:12
is elemental sulfur.
47:13 – 47:14
So
47:13 – 47:15
yeah,
47:16 – 47:17
we're still learning about it,
47:17 – 47:18
but quite excited.
47:18 – 47:19
You had a question as well?
47:19 – 47:20
Yeah,
47:20 – 47:21
what's your experience?
47:38 – 47:39
That's about five questions in
47:39 – 47:40
one.
47:42 – 47:44
So the question was, do I have a
47:44 – 47:46
perspective or opinion on
47:49 – 47:50
natural
47:51 – 47:54
on -farm microbial brew
47:54 – 47:55
development such as JADAM or
47:55 – 47:57
Corian farming or those
47:57 – 47:58
approaches
47:58 – 47:59
and you're
48:00 – 48:01
another question about calcium
48:01 – 48:02
and phosphorus, foliar versus
48:02 – 48:03
soil.
48:10 – 48:11
All right, so the
48:12 – 48:12
caveat here,
48:14 – 48:15
I do not have,
48:16 – 48:17
I have very limited experiences
48:17 – 48:18
with
48:19 – 48:21
those types of extractions for
48:23 – 48:24
the very simple reason that many
48:24 – 48:26
of the farmers that we work with
48:26 – 48:27
and where we do a lot of data
48:27 – 48:28
collection on what is actually
48:28 – 48:30
happening, what's going on,
48:30 – 48:31
don't have the bandwidth or
48:32 – 48:33
the labor resources.
48:33 – 48:34
Labor is too expensive for them
48:34 – 48:35
to create their own.
48:36 – 48:36
And so,
48:37 – 48:37
I don't have a lot of
48:37 – 48:38
experience.
48:39 – 48:41
What I know about those types of
48:41 – 48:44
extractions and microbial
48:44 – 48:44
products, I
48:45 – 48:47
expect that they have the
48:47 – 48:47
ability for,
48:48 – 48:50
they have the capacity to be
48:50 – 48:50
very valuable.
48:53 – 48:54
There are,
48:59 – 49:00
I first
49:01 – 49:05
became aware of the weakness of
49:07 – 49:10
producing on -farm microbes
49:10 – 49:12
from the perspective of compost
49:13 – 49:14
compost tea extracts and so
49:14 – 49:16
forth from the respective of
49:16 – 49:18
mycorrhizal fungi, because there
49:18 – 49:19
are many growers who are saying,
49:19 – 49:20
oh, well,
49:20 – 49:21
I'm using compost tea.
49:22 – 49:23
I'm making my own compost tea.
49:23 – 49:24
It's very high quality compost.
49:24 – 49:26
And therefore, this is the most
49:26 – 49:27
comprehensive, the most
49:27 – 49:28
complete, the most thorough
49:28 – 49:31
microbiome. We're getting much
49:31 – 49:32
greater benefits because we have
49:32 – 49:33
a much greater diversity of
49:33 – 49:34
species than if we're purchasing
49:34 – 49:35
an oculant with 20 different
49:35 – 49:36
species in it.
49:37 – 49:38
And that
49:39 – 49:40
is not true.
49:42 – 49:43
The diversity of species is
49:43 – 49:44
true.
49:46 – 49:48
I'm of the persuasion that no
49:48 – 49:49
compost,
49:50 – 49:51
tea extract,
49:51 – 49:53
or other types of on -farm brood
49:53 – 49:54
microbe extracts
49:55 – 49:56
be complete in the sense that
49:56 – 49:57
plant needs it.
49:58 – 50:00
For the very simple reason that,
50:01 – 50:03
and I need to, this data and
50:03 – 50:04
information is changing all the
50:04 – 50:07
time, but about a year or so
50:07 – 50:08
ago, maybe it was two years ago
50:08 – 50:09
at this point,
50:09 – 50:10
a very prestigious
50:10 – 50:12
microbiologist told me, John,
50:13 – 50:16
90 % of all the microbes in soil
50:17 – 50:19
can only be propagated in the
50:19 – 50:20
presence of living plant roots.
50:21 – 50:23
We cannot propagate them in the
50:23 – 50:24
lab,
50:24 – 50:25
We can't propagate them in a
50:25 – 50:26
compost pile. You can't
50:26 – 50:28
propagate them in any other type
50:28 – 50:28
of environment.
50:28 – 50:30
They can only be propagated in
50:30 – 50:32
the presence of living plant
50:32 – 50:32
roots.
50:33 – 50:35
So I would suggest that if we
50:35 – 50:37
want to do on -farm microbial
50:37 – 50:38
inoculant development,
50:39 – 50:42
let's use compost tea extract as
50:42 – 50:43
an example. If we're using
50:43 – 50:44
Johnson Sue compost,
50:44 – 50:45
the number of the persuasion
50:45 – 50:47
that the next stage,
50:47 – 50:49
either at the conclusion or the
50:49 – 50:50
latter part of that Johnson Sue
50:50 – 50:51
compost development,
50:52 – 50:54
we should plant
50:54 – 50:56
plants from dozens of different
50:56 – 50:58
plant families into that mix
50:59 – 51:02
and grow large vigorous root
51:02 – 51:04
systems and colonize that entire
51:04 – 51:05
compost with the diversity of
51:05 – 51:07
microbes that are coming from
51:07 – 51:08
those root systems.
51:08 – 51:10
And then we can propagate
51:10 – 51:11
mycorrhizal fungi and we can
51:11 – 51:12
propagate all of these other
51:12 – 51:13
organisms that are vectored by
51:13 – 51:15
the seeds that don't show up in
51:15 – 51:16
the compost pile on its own.
51:17 – 51:18
Or you can keep life simple and
51:18 – 51:19
buy BioCoat Gold.
51:22 – 51:22
So
51:22 – 51:24
that's
51:24 – 51:27
my kind of macro theoretical
51:27 – 51:28
answer.
51:28 – 51:29
but I don't have experience with
51:29 – 51:31
JADAM specifically on scale.
51:32 – 51:34
And to your second question
51:34 – 51:36
on foliar applications of
51:36 – 51:38
vinegar -extracted phosphorus
51:38 – 51:39
and calcium,
51:43 – 51:44
when
51:44 – 51:47
foliar applications are well
51:47 – 51:49
-designed and when soil and
51:49 – 51:50
plant ecosystems are well
51:50 – 51:51
-designed, reasonably well,
51:51 – 51:52
there are many instances where
51:52 – 51:54
we put on a foliar application
51:54 – 51:56
of a nutrient and
51:56 – 51:58
we get a disproportionate
51:58 – 51:59
response.
51:59 – 52:00
So
51:59 – 52:02
we put on, we might put on, I'm
52:02 – 52:03
making up
52:03 – 52:05
hypothetical examples here, we
52:05 – 52:07
might put on five ounces per
52:07 – 52:08
acre of calcium,
52:09 – 52:11
but the quantity of calcium when
52:11 – 52:12
you combine the
52:12 – 52:14
increased plant growth,
52:14 – 52:15
increased plant biomass,
52:15 – 52:17
with the increased calcium
52:17 – 52:18
content,
52:18 – 52:19
the quantity of calcium that is
52:19 – 52:21
present in the crop is now a
52:21 – 52:22
hundred X what you actually
52:22 – 52:23
applied.
52:23 – 52:25
And that is because if the
52:25 – 52:26
product applied is well
52:26 – 52:27
designed,
52:27 – 52:29
it increases overall plant
52:29 – 52:30
photosynthesis, it has a trigger
52:30 – 52:31
effect,
52:31 – 52:34
and the plant and the microbiome
52:34 – 52:35
is effective at extracting more
52:35 – 52:37
of that nutrient from the soil
52:37 – 52:38
profile, assuming that it's
52:38 – 52:39
present and available.
52:40 – 52:41
So from
52:42 – 52:43
that triggering perspective,
52:45 – 52:47
Small applications of nutrients
52:47 – 52:49
as foliars can be very
52:49 – 52:49
effective.
52:49 – 52:52
However, when the system is very
52:52 – 52:54
challenged, when we have very
52:54 – 52:55
poor soil biology, if we're at
52:55 – 52:57
very early stages of a
52:57 – 52:58
turnaround situation,
52:58 – 53:01
often the quantity of nutrients
53:01 – 53:03
that is required to produce a
53:03 – 53:05
crop response early is bigger
53:05 – 53:06
than the quantity that's
53:06 – 53:07
required later.
53:08 – 53:09
Does that make sense?
53:10 – 53:13
My one critique of the vinegar
53:13 – 53:14
extracts would be that the
53:14 – 53:16
quantity of nutrients contained
53:16 – 53:18
is usually actually quite low.
53:18 – 53:20
And that might be much more
53:20 – 53:22
effective later on in the
53:22 – 53:23
regeneration process than it
53:23 – 53:24
might be early on.
53:24 – 53:25
So that's it.
53:26 – 53:27
Any other questions?
53:27 – 53:28
Yes.
53:31 – 53:32
I
53:32 – 53:35
missed
53:37 – 53:38
part of your question.
53:38 – 53:39
Have I found a way to decompact
53:39 – 53:40
soils without what?
53:45 – 53:46
Have
53:48 – 53:51
I found a way to decompact soils
53:51 – 53:53
without having a proper ratio of
53:53 – 53:54
cations?
53:55 – 53:57
Calcium, magnesium balance, and
53:57 – 53:58
so forth.
54:00 – 54:01
Yes, there is one way.
54:03 – 54:04
Two
54:04 – 54:05
ways, actually,
54:07 – 54:08
that I'm aware of.
54:09 – 54:10
The one pathway
54:11 – 54:12
is
54:13 – 54:16
simply having and building very
54:16 – 54:17
large quantities of organic
54:17 – 54:18
matter.
54:18 – 54:20
So if you have, as you build up
54:20 – 54:21
organic matter to
54:23 – 54:24
levels and depends a bit on your
54:24 – 54:26
soil's clay context and clay
54:26 – 54:27
profile. I'm assuming you have
54:27 – 54:29
very high heavy clay soils.
54:31 – 54:32
High organic matter.
54:35 – 54:36
What was the first part of your
54:36 – 54:37
question or
54:37 – 54:38
first part of your response?
54:42 – 54:43
So it's a sandy loam to loam
54:43 – 54:44
soils. Well, why would you not
54:44 – 54:45
want to balance nutrients on a
54:45 – 54:46
calcium to magnesium ratios on a
54:46 – 54:47
sandy loam soil?
54:52 – 54:53
What is your total CEC?
54:56 – 54:57
Okay, now hang on a minute.
54:57 – 54:59
Now you're grinding my gears
54:59 – 55:01
here. You have a sandy loam soil
55:01 – 55:02
with 25 to 30 CEC.
55:02 – 55:03
Those things are usually
55:03 – 55:04
mutually exclusive.
55:05 – 55:06
Okay,
55:07 – 55:07
got it.
55:08 – 55:09
So
55:12 – 55:13
I was once on a soil,
55:14 – 55:16
saw a soil analysis that said 40
55:16 – 55:18
% base saturation magnesium, and
55:18 – 55:19
my comment was that, oh, this
55:19 – 55:20
soil must be very compact.
55:21 – 55:22
And the farmer said, I don't
55:22 – 55:23
think so.
55:23 – 55:25
And he had 12 % organic matter.
55:30 – 55:31
The other
55:34 – 55:35
observation that I've seen is
55:35 – 55:37
when we have soils that have
55:37 – 55:39
very high and
55:39 – 55:41
very active mycorrhizal fungi
55:41 – 55:42
activity.
55:42 – 55:44
And in the conversation with
55:44 – 55:45
Gabe Brown yesterday,
55:46 – 55:48
in Rick Clark's session, we had
55:48 – 55:49
an interesting,
55:49 – 55:50
Gabe raised a very interesting
55:50 – 55:52
point, a very important point,
55:52 – 55:54
that it's not
55:54 – 55:57
adequate for us, if we want to
55:57 – 55:58
talk about building soil
55:58 – 55:59
aggregate structure, it's not
55:59 – 56:01
enough to just look at total
56:01 – 56:02
fungal populations, we need to
56:02 – 56:03
understand
56:03 – 56:05
what is our mycorrhizal fungi
56:05 – 56:07
population versus our
56:07 – 56:08
saprophytic fungi population.
56:08 – 56:09
So your saprophytes are your
56:09 – 56:10
decomposers. They're going to
56:10 – 56:14
decompose your non -living plant
56:14 – 56:14
residue.
56:15 – 56:18
And the saprophytes have a
56:18 – 56:20
much more limited effect on
56:20 – 56:22
building stable soil aggregates.
56:23 – 56:24
It's really the mycorrhizal
56:24 – 56:25
fungi that are the most
56:25 – 56:26
effective at building stable
56:26 – 56:26
soil aggregates.
56:27 – 56:29
So you can build stable soil
56:29 – 56:30
aggregates
56:32 – 56:34
even when you have a more
56:34 – 56:35
imbalanced calcium to magnesium
56:35 – 56:36
ratio.
56:36 – 56:38
But I'll add one more point.
56:39 – 56:40
You
56:40 – 56:41
have sandy
56:41 – 56:45
loam soils with 25 to 30 CECs.
56:49 – 56:50
Okay.
56:52 – 56:53
Out of curiosity, what are your
56:53 – 56:54
potassium levels?
56:59 – 57:01
So around 2 % base saturation in
57:01 – 57:02
a loam soil, you're looking at
57:02 – 57:04
300 to 400 parts per million.
57:06 – 57:06
Okay.
57:07 – 57:08
So
57:11 – 57:12
there are,
57:13 – 57:14
in the scenario that you're
57:14 – 57:15
describing,
57:17 – 57:19
you have heavy soils that have
57:19 – 57:20
large mineral reserves.
57:21 – 57:23
And there is an element, I don't
57:23 – 57:24
have the chemistry
57:24 – 57:26
at
57:26 – 57:28
the tip of my tongue to describe
57:28 – 57:29
this in detail right now, nor do
57:29 – 57:30
we have the time,
57:31 – 57:32
but there is an element of
57:33 – 57:34
soil flocculation.
57:35 – 57:37
flocculating clays, not just
57:37 – 57:39
being an expression of total
57:39 – 57:41
magnesium and calcium content
57:41 – 57:42
alone. It's not just the total
57:42 – 57:44
content. There is also a
57:44 – 57:45
reflection of availability.
57:47 – 57:50
And the one observation
57:50 – 57:51
that I've found very intriguing
57:51 – 57:52
is
57:53 – 57:54
in situations such as the one
57:54 – 57:56
that you're describing where we
57:56 – 57:57
have very heavy soils,
57:57 – 57:59
it's economically unfeasible in
57:59 – 58:01
many cases to put on enough
58:01 – 58:02
limestone
58:02 – 58:04
to compensate and to bring the
58:04 – 58:06
calcium magnesium ratio into the
58:06 – 58:06
desired balance.
58:07 – 58:09
And so our approach has been to
58:09 – 58:11
put on limited
58:11 – 58:14
amounts of very fine limestone.
58:15 – 58:16
It can be
58:17 – 58:19
I want to see a minimum of 200
58:19 – 58:20
mesh particle size.
58:20 – 58:22
It can be pelletized and
58:22 – 58:25
applications as low as 30 to 50
58:25 – 58:26
pounds per acre.
58:26 – 58:28
I like to be in the 100 to 200
58:28 – 58:29
pounds per acre range,
58:29 – 58:31
but applications as low as 30 to
58:31 – 58:32
50 pounds per acre applied at
58:32 – 58:35
planting as a fertilizer in a
58:35 – 58:36
drill or something like that can
58:36 – 58:39
have a tremendous effect on the
58:39 – 58:40
crop and it has a tremendous
58:40 – 58:42
effect on soil flocculation in
58:42 – 58:43
that zone.
58:46 – 58:48
So there is this reflection,
58:48 – 58:50
this response to calcium
58:50 – 58:52
availability that can last for a
58:52 – 58:53
several year period that is an
58:53 – 58:54
economical pathway.
58:54 – 58:55
You're not trying to change the
58:55 – 58:56
bulk solar environment,
58:56 – 58:57
but you're changing what is
58:57 – 58:59
happening in that rhizosphere
58:59 – 59:00
that can produce very positive
59:00 – 59:01
crop responses.
59:02 – 59:03
You're going to cut me off?
59:04 – 59:05
One more question?
59:05 – 59:06
All right, I'll go over here.
59:20 – 59:21
Oh,
59:22 – 59:24
so this is no, yeah, this is a
59:24 – 59:24
follow up question to our
59:24 – 59:26
earlier conversation where I
59:26 – 59:27
mentioned 40 units of nitrogen
59:27 – 59:28
and 20 units of sulfur as a
59:28 – 59:30
beginning at planting as a
59:30 – 59:30
plant. thiosulfate.
59:31 – 59:32
And what I intended to
59:32 – 59:33
communicate, I may not have been
59:33 – 59:34
clear,
59:34 – 59:36
was I prefer to get the sulfur
59:36 – 59:38
from ammonium thiosulfate and
59:38 – 59:39
then adding other forms of
59:39 – 59:40
nitrogen. You can just add more
59:40 – 59:42
ammonium sulfate and add more
59:42 – 59:43
than 20 units of sulfur if you
59:43 – 59:45
want, or you can add urea or you
59:45 – 59:46
can add UAN or something else.
59:47 – 59:48
So yeah, that was what I
59:48 – 59:49
intended to communicate.
59:50 – 59:51
All right, I wanna say thank you
59:51 – 59:52
all. Thank you all for being
59:52 – 59:53
here.
59:59 – 1:00:01
I'm sure there are many follow
1:00:01 – 1:00:02
-up questions that I didn't get
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to. I'm intending to, as much as
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possible, spend my time at the
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AEA exhibit on the trade show
1:00:06 – 1:00:07
floor, so I'm going to be out
1:00:07 – 1:00:08
there if you have any follow -up
1:00:08 – 1:00:09
questions.
1:00:10 – 1:00:11
The team at AEA and I are
1:00:11 – 1:00:13
dedicated to bringing this show
1:00:13 – 1:00:14
to you because we believe that
1:00:14 – 1:00:16
knowledge and information is the
1:00:16 – 1:00:18
foundation of successful
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regenerative systems.
1:00:20 – 1:00:22
At AEA, we believe that growing
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better quality food and making
1:00:24 – 1:00:25
more money from your crops is
1:00:25 – 1:00:26
possible.
1:00:26 – 1:00:28
And since 2006, we've worked
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with leading professional
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growers to help them do just
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that.
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At AEA, we don't guess.
1:00:33 – 1:00:35
We test. We analyze.
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And we provide recommendations
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based on scientific data,
1:00:39 – 1:00:40
knowledge, and experience.
1:00:40 – 1:00:41
We've developed products that
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are uniquely positioned to help
1:00:43 – 1:00:44
growers make more money with
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regenerative agriculture.
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If you are a professional grower
1:00:47 – 1:00:49
who believes in testing instead
1:00:49 – 1:00:50
of guessing,
1:00:51 – 1:00:52
someone who believes in a
1:00:52 – 1:00:53
better, more regenerative way to
1:00:53 – 1:00:54
grow,
1:00:54 – 1:00:57
visit advancingecoag .com and
1:00:57 – 1:00:58
contact us to see if AEA is
1:00:58 – 1:00:59
right for you.
Hey there! Ask me anything!