Breaking News Warning! This is NOT a proven new weight-loss drug! In
fact Tricontanol is a natural fatty acid growth stimulant.
HM! Gardens (Hommel Mangas Gardens) located in Greenwood,
Indiana is an official site for a new Hosta Growth Study. The question had to
be answered: “To use Alfalfa Pellets or Not to use Alfalfa Pellets.”
Alfalfa meal or pellets, that are used as animal feed, have
also been used to increase organic matter in the soil and offer nutrients and a
high availability of trace minerals. Here’s the kicker: they contain triacontanol,
a natural fatty-acid growth stimulant.
Are you "Woe is me" because your Hosta Wu is not "Wow"
I'll let you know in another month if this is the greatest idea EVER — or not!
So figured that "why yes, I would like bigger hostas and double the number and
size of flower buds on my flowering plants," so I jumped into my horse-driven
wagon and headed to the Tractor Supply Store. (Any feed store would carry it, but Rural King also offers free popcorn — just saying.) You
can pick up a 40lb. bag of Alfalfa Pellets for about $11.99.
Just so you don't get the idea that I follow any fad that comes along, the following information from the Sault Ste. Marie
Horticultural Society in Ontario Canada is entitiled: Alfalfa Pellets—Wonder Drug for
Hosta?
Triacontanol has been
called “the most potent growth hormone ever”. It can be extracted from alfalfa
in one of the following ways:
1.
Soak 5 tablets (500-600 mg. of compressed alfalfa) in one gallon of water for
24 hours. Agitate and drench the plants with it as many as 5x during the
growing season.
2.
Add 2-3 cupfuls of alfalfa meal (be sure it has not been denatured by high
heat) to 1 yard of soil or compost.
3.
Use alfalfa meal or chopped alfalfa as a light mulch or top dress around plants
and apply water.
4.
Put a couple of handfuls in an old sock, put the sock in a 5 gallon bucket and
let it make alfalfa tea in about 48 hours. Use the water on your plants.
Alfalfa pellets look a little like goose poop when you apply it and it smells just a bit. So I sprinkled the pellets around in a circular base under the leaves of my flowering plants and hostas (away from the plant stems) and and let it rain first. Rain makes the pellets expand like marshmallow Peeps in the microwave. Of course, you can be boring and water the pellets in. But I chose to also use lovely cocoa shell mulch, (which is supposed to divert slugs) to cover the Alfalfa pellets about three weeks later.
Beneficial results are
as follows:
1.
Early breaking of dormancy.
2.
Doubling of weight of plants in one year.
3.
Up to three years of growth in one growing season.
4.
Root system greatly increases.
5.
Possible stimulation of mycorrhizal bacteria and reported inhibition of
pathogens.
6.
Doubling of number and size of flower buds, flowers and seeds.
7.
Much improved quality of growth with increased number and thickness of leaves.
Source: Westside Hosta
FAQ by Hosta folks.
I will keep you updated on my official research findings.
And if you go to the Tractor Supply Store in Greenwood, tell Racquel hello!
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