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          | Compost Tea 
 
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          | Subject:  Puzzling question 
 
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          | From | Location | Message | Date Posted |  
            | sdreefers | Sioux Falls, SD | So, I was sitting around thinking, why don't the microbes die when they are sprayed???  My sprayer pumps like 30psi and about 30 feet so I am wondering how these little microbes aren't killed during the spraying process.   | 4/18/2009 10:23:55 AM |  
            | Pumpkin Farm | Going Green | http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/bc/ahp/CellBio/SaS/SandS.html | 4/18/2009 8:41:40 PM |  
            | Tad12 | Seattle, WA | sdreefers,
 Good question, and to be totally fair, some microbial loss is unavoidable.  The bacteria will survive almost anything, but the fungi and protozoa are a bit more sensitive.
 
 The only way to know for sure is to use a sprayer that's already been tested, or take a look at the tea under a microscope before and after it's been through the sprayer.
 
 In order to minimize damage, many people use sump pumps, or pumps designed to allow larger particulate.  In addition, a nozzle tip that has no right angles, lower psi, larger droplet size and more of a rainbow effect when spraying.
 
 
 
 | 4/21/2009 12:44:37 PM |  
            | billprice | bliss,n.y.- heart of Wyoming County | I like to use a watering can with a fine nozzle. A thrifty drench! | 5/12/2009 4:30:30 PM |  
          | Total Posts: 4 | Current Server Time: 10/31/2025 4:05:29 AM |  |