unique multifunctional top dressing for tomatoes, cucumbers and other garden vegetables. protects against diseases improves growth and fruiting Please subscribe to my channel) #cucumbers #fertilizer #garden
@snowbird6855 sure I'll do this with you.. let's start with, why would you do this? What problem would you have that you'd feel the need to pour milk on your plants? Calcium deficiency? If so, there's way better alternatives, even ones you can easily make at home, that won't attract pests or rot and create harmful bacteria. I can't think of a single benefit of using milk over any other solution Edit: also.. many things said in this vid are complete nonsense
I just (mistakenly) assumed this video would be preceded by a long musical entrance, an unnecessary preamble about how the producer got into gardening/organics etc - but it was just the opposite. Straight into the advice, good information and some additional tips that were brief and very helpful. Good on you sir! (or as we say in Australia, goodonya mate!) Very welcome, thank you.
For years when my tomato plants get that spotted mold blight I trim off the affected leaves then soak the plant with dehydrated milk solution. Works wonders
Love this. Thank you for sharing. To late for this year but going to try it anyway. For sure next year. Can I use almond milk or does it have to be cows milk?
By FAR the easiest way to improve the health of tomatoes, stops blossom rot, gets rid of pest, increases strength of leaves. I usually just pour a cup of the mix on the bottom then spray the leaves, doesn't take much.
@itsdarke1054 I don't know the answer to your question there, but I promise you this as a guy who lived on the ocean side for years on an island we had hundreds if not thousands of slugs so bad when I first moved there I was like I'm fucking outta here man you would open the front door and you had to walk to the car like you were on an obstacle coarse. Then I learned from the locals to buy rock salt (any salt works but rock salt was bigger pieces) and in one day gone. I promise you if you lay down salt they are done. If salt touches the slug they litterly (however you spell it) disolve/melt DIE SO ya you can even make a nice jug of salt water and where ever you pour it no slug will go near it. I promise you try it you will never see another slug. If you are the least bit sadistic pur some salt on a slug and watch it dissolve lol
I've killed off plants before by using too much milk. I regularly use calcium supplement to prevent Blossom End rot, & seaweed extract liquid fertiliser, more expensive but works very well.
Milk kefir is good too Sir!! So is boiled rice 🤲🏻 Whey is easy to make at home folks. Just add a squeeze of lemon or a little splash of vinegar. Separate the curds and whey
@@smartmd4278 superb nutshell thank you🙏 I use Chux cloth because I don't have Muslin cloth🤣 Also during the compression, have you ever tried putting in some roasted almonds and dried apricots? A sprinkle of Poppy, or toasted sesame seed... scrumptious on a cheese platter.. ⚖ Most excellent in a curry dish .. Do you have any favourite recipe ideas?
@@ralsharp6013 😀if u would not have pointed out technological error I wouldn’t have picked up ,well many dishes can be made with paneer ,look up on RU-vid or Google.
I live in Tahiti and it’s what I do. I pour milk on the soil and tomatoes suddenly become healthier but I never put on the leaves because it attracts ants.
Also ive heard that banana peels in a mason jar (not sure if the jar matters) full of water set for 2 3 days is great. I tried it ,and my tomotoes are doing fantastic!. Just hope this 100° temp dosnt get up to 117 like last year. Mostly for the blueberries wich i pick on the daily.
Hii ! I also have a tomato plant and it just gave three tomatoes and now it only giving flower BUDS but no flower. The temperature is above 90F where i live I just thought may be my plant stopped flowering because of high temperature but it seems you also have tomato plant which is doing good in 100F. By any chance can you please share the tips for the tomato plant,like you placed it in shade or in full sun etc.
@@zanny3754 I actually have 5 plants. 2 of which are in large pots. All doing good (so far) I just make sure i water them daily after the sun starts setting and theyre in the shade. Other then that that theyre pretty much in full sun. Been doing tomatoes for quite a while and i believe its in the soil mixture. Decent top soil and a mix of perlite , vermiculite, charcoal and some veggie fertilizer. Keep on trying! Many other experimental veggies this year as well. Lots of trial and error this year. Also a couple corn stocks from seed that im really excited about. Hope yer tomatoes 🍅 do well 😊
@@assessmenttreatment8445 I’m not sure I agree. Especially in the garden. It takes a personal walk through for me and Google often gives me faulty info. I will admit I’d be lost without the internet. But it takes a lot of digging to get to the right answer.
I wasn’t able to see clearly when you took male flower for cucumbers to pollinate the female flower , did you take the female flower off then pollinate? Also are we supposed to water only with warm water to not shock the roots ? Or is warm water fine ? Thank you so very much for educating us !
When I was a kid, pretty sure my parents put milk on the pumpkin plants and we got giant pumpkins, haven’t seen that since this video so, that was back in the 80’s my parents were doing this, I suspect it works
I wonder if the calcium in sesame mixture is absorbed better by the plants because cow milk calcium is not at all absorbed well by humans. Most people don't know this and milk marketing is so deceitful.
1% is not milk its chemical saturated poison not fit for consumption. Want proof? If you didn’t drink that sh!t your brain could have told you that. Duh!
Give it a crack. You are feeding the bacteria and then they feed the plant. You can use sugar and old soft drink. A different way of thinking like the cattle farmer is a grass grower.
@Dream Garden Thanks. Unfortunately, a deer came through last night and ate every single tomato off of every single plant....and all my watermelons. Grrrrr....
Mix hydrogen peroxide, food grade preferably, dilute in a spray bottle.... 20 drops per 8oz of water. Kills fungals mold and anything else bad without harming plants.
Dear Mister Roboto.... After you put the milk back in the fridge grab 3 eggs . Break eggs into a 2 or 3 gallon watering can and fill with water. Use a forceful setting to break up the eggs. If you water your string beans and other vegetable plants in the garden that are preyed upon by deer , rabbits and woodchucks , the egg mixture will keep those veggie predators away. The egg mixture will dry on the foliage and smell repulsive to beasts especially deer who do the most damage. Do this every 2 weeks or after a good rain. The eggs will also fertilize the beans & etc. plants to give a higher yield. I do not use a fence around the garden when using eggs. I mow the lawn right up to the beans and other plants for a neat groomed look. This method is tried and true as long as you keep the egg water applied properly. Complete foliar coverage is imperative . After watching this video I will use milk as well. I think that red cap top, hi fat milk would be best. I do not think that Almond or Silk milk would be as satisfactory, if useful at all . In essence I'll be pouring a watery liquid omelet mix on the vegetables and foliage. In the culmination of the tomato & pepper harvest you can use the milk & egg fertilizer mix, minus the water with the vegetables and finally make yourself an omelet that's been months in the making.
After a plague of raccoons and rats decimating my garden, I surrounded my garden with an electric fence normally used on farms to corral livestock.. No pests have invaded it since.