Soft rock phosphate in no-till

MustangStudFarm

Well-Known Member
heh, after all the tranny-jokes that wife of yours is never gonna have a clean-mind again
you tainted her..
uh...
that sounds bad..
When you spend enough time under a dirty tranny, its hard to not make jokes about it. I feel like I should get paid for it, but I do it out of love. Oh, I have been looking for a beefed up tranny that can really deliver power to my rear-end! I even have to change out the yolk because of abuse or not properly engaged lol...


These are both yolks by the way, damn only a country boy would know this...
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greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
[QUOTE="MustangStudFarm, post: 13155400, member: 426145" Oh, I have been looking for a beefed up tranny that can really deliver power to my rear-end!
[/QUOTE]
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platt

Well-Known Member
nice you mentioning it cos there are two smart cats in that list.
Yeah, I see a bunch of veterans on the thread! Whitebb2727, ChunkyStool, GreaseMonkey, BobBitchen
I respect not the knowledge but the will
you finally grabbed the phone ? theres nothing to hide..:P
 

MustangStudFarm

Well-Known Member
Phosphorus application can reduce the activity of mycorrhizae, but at normal rates the organisms still play a vital role in nutrient uptake. The fungi can benefit the plant in absorption of micronutrients as well. Excessive applications of phosphorus can eliminate mycorrhizae altogether, but, at extremely low levels of soil phosphorus, mycorrhizal activity can actually increase in response to fertilizer phosphorus additions.
 

bullSnot

Well-Known Member
so many scientists so few facts. Phosphorus of all types can bring into cannabis HEAVY METALS. Again why less is more on nutrients. Even soft rock phosphorus in abundance can suck in metals from soils....Forest Gump had lead poisoning.
 
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