Do you use Epsom salts on your roses?
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How Do I Use Epsom Salts?
Comments (4)Magnesium has varous roles in protein/nucleic acid synthesis and as an enzyme cofactor but probably the main reason it's important in plants is that it's the central ion in chlorophyll. Magnesium and potassium have been shown to inhibit each other's uptake although increasing potassium supposedly has a greater effect on magnesium uptake than increasing magnesium has on potassium uptake. Therefore, adding a bit more epsom salts when you use a bloom booster might be worth considering. While potassium affects ability of the plant to take up magnesium, magnesium merely seems to compete for binding sites in the media. Presumably the concentration of magnesium and potassium used for orchids wouldn't be sufficient to limit each other's absorption into the media so unless your are really overdoing the epsom salts, I wouldn't think adding a bit more magnesium would affect the effectiveness of the bloom booster....See MoreCalcium to enhance Austin roses' sex appeal and epsom salt
Comments (12)I have not located the original posts supporting this idea, but I do have to wonder if something else is going on. As a plant physiologist, I have trouble believing that you could get enough calcium into a cut flower, in so short a time, to make any difference. On the other hand, the citrate could be used by the flower as a source of energy, and we know that helps -- commercial flower preservatives almost always have citrate in them for precisely that reason. Also, those preservative solutions almost always strongly acidify the water, which makes we wonder, again, about a calcium-based substance that would at best be neutral pH, but in most cases, alkaline. So I'm wondering if the effect being seen here may be due to the citrate. That would still leave the question of why Tums works (CaCO3) -- I tend to doubt that it does, but as I said, have not found the reference about it. Over the years, we've done quite a lot of research on floral preservatives. Generally the often-recommended aspirin has no effect at all. One of the best materials we ever found was one part Sprite (regular, not diet -- you want that high-fructose corn syrup!) to 3 parts water, then with a couple drops of Clorox in a quart of the solution. That mixture gives excellent life to cut flowers. Sprite has citric acid (Hydrogen citrate), simple sugars, and is rather acidic -- the three things we want in a preservative solution....See MoreUses for Epsom Salts in the garden
Comments (14)If it works like they say it does....I may even start gardening again. I would plant maybe 15 tomato plants and not have enough for our own daily use. Between the plants not producing enough and the deer thinking I planted it for them...I just gave up. I'm excited...I'm going to try it on my house plants too. Do you think it would encourage my Fiscus tree to "thicken" up a little? patti...See MoreCopper Bathtub - do you miss using Epsom Salts?
Comments (0)Thinking of getting a copper bathtub, I love all the upsides but I've been pretty into bath bombs and Epsom Salts. I've read some manufactures say you can use them, but you need to rinse well, or that the inside of the tub just won't have a patina. Others say it'll destroy the copper. Anyone have any insight? Thanks!...See MoreRelated Professionals
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