Use Biobizz Grow and Bloom in your vegetable garden

KLITE

Well-Known Member
Yes people I might have gone crazy but i bought 10 l of both grow and bloom for my vegetable garden which i have started in the 2nd week of may.
I have fed all my plants twice with 1ml per liter of bio grow, and bearing in mind my soil quality is below average with a lot! of small stones, plants have literaly doubled in size since having fed them Bio Grow.
People pass by and comment on how my peppers and tomato plants are bigger than theirs even though mine have been transplanted at least 3 weeks posterior.
The plants just look too happy.
So if you have a somewhat depleted soil or you just dont have the time and money to put animal shit in the ground trust biobizz because they will make you have the best garden in the hood.
 

Bilbo Baggins

Well-Known Member
Always wondered how that would work out, bit expensive right enough, I kind of do a similar thing myself, I've always been a lover of Geraniums and grow loads of them and keep my favourite ones going by cloning and planting them out in containers in the garden every year, and as geraniums like a similar soil structure to MJ ie sandy/well drained/perlite etc I started using the old soil from my MJ grows to fill the containers the results are spectacular as there is obviously still some Biogrow/Bloom left in the soil, so the geraniums grow really well and if you want to take it a step up you keep using biogrow and bloom to water the containers, never used it with any veggies or whatever as mines is a flower only garden but hey, you say it does a good job wd.
 

KLITE

Well-Known Member
I really have to say i was in serious! shock. It might not turn out to be that expensive tbh. I have a 300m2 parcel that requires just about 1m3 of water to be watered. i only plan on using 1 ml per liter of grow once a week so i pretty much have enough for 10 feeds which is just right until i start using the bloom also at 1 ml per liter just to add some weight on my fruiting plants like tomatoes, peppers, beans, courgette, pumpkin, brocolli(is this a flowering plant right?) and aubergine. I have onions and leeks which i am not too sure how to feed and the lettuce i only plan on giving growing fertelizer, however could it benefit for a bit of phosphorus? I also plan on foliar feeding with my backpack sprayer with fulvic and humic acid at dawn come fruiting time think that might be kind of fun, might even add some kind of blooming enhancer in the foliar feed as well. It would be relatively cheap to give the more expensive nutrients foliarly since i can probably spray the whole thing with about 12 liters of water i could probably get into the extravagance of a few ml of nice supplements 3 times a week at sunrise and have a garden with never before seen quality in the little village i am at hehe. people there havent even heard of liquid fertelizers yet. However the place where people keep chickens is better and bigger than most people's bedrooms i know of.
 

puffdatchronic

Well-Known Member
biogrow is decent used it for quite a while. I have started using "chilli focus " from growth technology though.. works very well to
 
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