” To be a farmer is to be a student forever, for each day brings something new.” ― Rudolph Steiner
Let’s think of this in another way. Say you ate one huge meal per week. Your body would have lots of nutrition added all at once and then would need to ration that nutrition for the week until your next big meal. This is akin to traditional fertility. When applied, nutrients are in excess in the system and the microbes and plants work to use up as much as they can, but inherently a large portion goes to waste, typically in the form of runoff into our waterways. The application of synthetic fertilizer disrupts the natural functions of nutrient exchange between plants and the microbiome, requiring the plant to wait for the next fertility pass to receive more available nutrition.
But what about eating when you’re hungry? Maybe that’s some combination of breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Your body can get nutrition when it’s hungry and needs fuel to perform its functions. This is akin to how EnSoil Algae™ works in the system. The algae cells promote sustained nutrition for plants and act as time-release fertility tools due to the cells inside the plant root hairs releasing and cycling nutrients in real time, supporting the functionality of your soils and keeping your plants fed and nourished on demand.
So how long do algae cells stay alive in the system? The answer varies depending on conditions. A single cell is likely alive from 72 hours up to a week, but the community of algae cells will stay alive much longer. In the worst conditions possible, the algae cells will remain living for a minimum of two weeks allowing EnSoil Algae™ to act as a time-released biostimulant supporting the system.