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Old January 19, 2012   #42
z_willus_d
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Eastern Suburb of Sacramento, CA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by boomtown View Post
As a preventative, you drench the soil with Actinovate + water and the microorganism will go and protect your plant's root system. Our product actually forms a shield around the roots to fend off all of the bad microbes that is in everyone's soil. In addition to protecting the roots, Actinovate will also eat the microbes and then spit it back out into the soil as beneficial nutrients. The result is a healthier and stronger plant.
I realize this is an old thread, but I'm curious about something here. If Actinovate has formed a shield around the roots of a plant and one later tries to inoculate with a beneficial, will that that "shield" bar the good organisms from taking hold as well the bad? How does Actinovate discriminate between "good" and "bad," or any other similar product? I'm wondering how exactly we get to have our cake and eat it too (with icing).

Thanks,
Naysen
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