Growing with Music

I play music in my growroom. Not for the plants but for me whenever I go in there to work. It's always motivates me when I open the door and hear some Bob Marley playing.

I remember reading a scientific study somewhere that showed no difference to the plant with music or without.
 

Snickelfrits

Active Member
I play music in my growroom. Not for the plants but for me whenever I go in there to work. It's always motivates me when I open the door and hear some Bob Marley playing.

I remember reading a scientific study somewhere that showed no difference to the plant with music or without.
i swear i saw on mythbusters that it does make a hair of a difference and id def trust Adam and Jaime over some no name scientist any day:)
 

mistioud

Active Member
They said death metal was the best I think.. that is what my friend said, but I have no seen the episode... I don't watch much TV. I remembered I had book on the mozart effect. I looked in the index for plant and this is what I found

Sonic Bloom:

Nature also responds to the Mozart Effect. Some of the most intriguing research in the field of healing with sound has explored the use of music to enhance plant growth. Dan Carlson is a pioneer in what is called sonic bloom. In 1960, when serving in the U.S. Army in Korea, he witnessed the horrors of food shortages and observed what people would eat when they ran out of staple crops. First, they'd eat the fruit or the full plant containing the seed; then the stalks or vines; and, finally, the roots. Within a couple of years, there was no food.
Carlson went back to his home in Minnesota and contemplated ways to improve plant growth, not only by enriching soil, but also by strenthening the mouthlike openings in leaf structures. He thought it might be possible for plants to select what they needed to grow best rather than being force-fed (as the apostles of new chemical soil supplements preached). He began to experiment with the idea that sound would prompt plants to open, and discovered that plants grew best in the early morning when the birds were singing. Then it hit him. Perhaps certain types of music or nonmelodic sounds would stimulate plant growth. Carlson devised cassette tapes that contained nonmusical sounds *that is, sounds that we don't consider true melody). He found a specialist in Minneapolis, Michael Holtz, who confirmed that certain music has vibrations and frequencies in common with birdsong. One of the first types of music he found to which plants seemed to respond is played by the sitar, the traditional stringed instrument from India. The sound of the sitar is not for all Western ears, but plants cant seem to get enough of it.
Meanwhile, Dorothy Retallack, a grad student at Temple Beull College in Denver, also began to experiment with plants and music. She construced five small greenhouses and placed corn, squash, marigolds, zinnias, and petunias inside. The greenhouses were all the same size and received the same lighting, water, and soil. For several months, she played different types of music to plants in four of the chambers. (As a control, the fifth had no sounds piped in.) One group of plants got Bach, the second Indian classical music, the third loud rock, and the last country-western. She found that Bach and Indian music stirred the growth of the plants dramatically. The flowers were more abundant, and the vines even grew toward the speakers. In the rock and roll greenhouse, all was not well: There were many fewer flowers, and the plants didn't lack's surprise, she found that the plants developed almost identically to those in the house where there was no music at all.

The book is the mozart effect: tapping the power of music to heal the body, strengthen the mind, and unlock the creative spirit
 

Punk

Well-Known Member
Hi!

Has anyone ever grown with music??

https://www.rollitup.org/indoor-growing/376345-first-time-grow-pictures-will.html

This is mine, and I will be trying to induce Mozart and make these babies geniuses.

Hm... or maybe other music?

Anyone?

Oh ya dude, music makes the buds super huge, just be careful, you CAN actually give them music burn. I'm serious. Every plant is different, they don't all like the same music...I got this White Widow, she won't put out unless I play "gimme three steps" OVER AND OVER. I have a northern lights which loves Slayer.
 

legallyflying

Well-Known Member
Oh ya dude, music makes the buds super huge, just be careful, you CAN actually give them music burn. I'm serious. Every plant is different, they don't all like the same music...I got this White Widow, she won't put out unless I play "gimme three steps" OVER AND OVER. I have a northern lights which loves Slayer.
LMFAO. music burn. Now THAT is fucking funny!

It really depends on the strain. Sativas likes techno whereas the indicas actually prefer smooth jazz. I would reserve heavy metal for your MD 20/20 distillery room.
 

DrFever

New Member
hahahaha awesome yes i believe that music does make a difference i talk to my girls every day wife thinks im fckt up hahahaha i got my afgan playing aganistan music hahahaha ( Kidding ) actually jus talkin to em i find makes a world of differerence
to each there own but it really does music even talkin to em works

SHOW THEM THE LOVE AND THEY WILL REWARD YOU BACK
 

legallyflying

Well-Known Member
Talking and or just breathing on your plants helps. If I'm in my 7-7-7 room with the co2 off my co2 ppm will jump from 350 to 650 in like 5 minutes
 

Kphlash

Member
Oh ya dude, music makes the buds super huge, just be careful, you CAN actually give them music burn. I'm serious. Every plant is different, they don't all like the same music...I got this White Widow, she won't put out unless I play "gimme three steps" OVER AND OVER. I have a northern lights which loves Slayer.
LMAO...+rep for that

I saw somewhere that the frequency of bumble bees positively affected the growth of plants
This could be why the death metal was the best in the Mythbusters episode, because of the fast vibrations.

They said death metal was the best I think.. that is what my friend said, but I have no seen the episode... I don't watch much TV. I remembered I had book on the mozart effect. I looked in the index for plant and this is what I found

Sonic Bloom:

Nature also responds to the Mozart Effect. Some of the most intriguing research in the field of healing with sound has explored the use of music to enhance plant growth. Dan Carlson is a pioneer in what is called sonic bloom. In 1960, when serving in the U.S. Army in Korea, he witnessed the horrors of food shortages and observed what people would eat when they ran out of staple crops. First, they'd eat the fruit or the full plant containing the seed; then the stalks or vines; and, finally, the roots. Within a couple of years, there was no food.
Carlson went back to his home in Minnesota and contemplated ways to improve plant growth, not only by enriching soil, but also by strenthening the mouthlike openings in leaf structures. He thought it might be possible for plants to select what they needed to grow best rather than being force-fed (as the apostles of new chemical soil supplements preached). He began to experiment with the idea that sound would prompt plants to open, and discovered that plants grew best in the early morning when the birds were singing. Then it hit him. Perhaps certain types of music or nonmelodic sounds would stimulate plant growth. Carlson devised cassette tapes that contained nonmusical sounds *that is, sounds that we don't consider true melody). He found a specialist in Minneapolis, Michael Holtz, who confirmed that certain music has vibrations and frequencies in common with birdsong. One of the first types of music he found to which plants seemed to respond is played by the sitar, the traditional stringed instrument from India. The sound of the sitar is not for all Western ears, but plants cant seem to get enough of it.
Meanwhile, Dorothy Retallack, a grad student at Temple Beull College in Denver, also began to experiment with plants and music. She construced five small greenhouses and placed corn, squash, marigolds, zinnias, and petunias inside. The greenhouses were all the same size and received the same lighting, water, and soil. For several months, she played different types of music to plants in four of the chambers. (As a control, the fifth had no sounds piped in.) One group of plants got Bach, the second Indian classical music, the third loud rock, and the last country-western. She found that Bach and Indian music stirred the growth of the plants dramatically. The flowers were more abundant, and the vines even grew toward the speakers. In the rock and roll greenhouse, all was not well: There were many fewer flowers, and the plants didn't lack's surprise, she found that the plants developed almost identically to those in the house where there was no music at all.

The book is the mozart effect: tapping the power of music to heal the body, strengthen the mind, and unlock the creative spirit
YAY somebody else who knows about this. Ya the Mozart Effect was done before Heavy Metal was out, or mainstream, Mozart is very fast very complex and there are lots of different rhythm's at once, so all of these could be consistent with the frequency of bees,

If they respond to vibrations, it makes me want to do a howard stern on them, and turn my bass up and treble off and humm to them till they gasm sweet bud for me to smoke. :) think i really will try this-just reminded me of it lol
 

Snickelfrits

Active Member
LMFAO. music burn. Now THAT is fucking funny!

It really depends on the strain. Sativas likes techno whereas the indicas actually prefer smooth jazz. I would reserve heavy metal for your MD 20/20 distillery room.
i know i had some plants that loved the sweet sound of Kenny G
 

mistioud

Active Member
In Jorge Cervantes "Ultimate Grow DVD 2" there is a section where he is showing a room with a sound system and it is playing bach because as he says "bach is smooth and the plants love it"
 
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