Wallace Organic Wonder Mychorizea fungi review.

JungleSlut

Well-Known Member
Screenshot_20190726-132652_Chrome.jpg Screenshot_20190726-134221_Chrome.jpg
These are the first plants I've grown.
My homeboy got 15 years growing dope.
He suggested GREAT WHITE MYCO. Said it's all he ever used.

I'm sure it works.
But I've always hated middle men.
And how they price hike.

After much research I found out Theres only 2-3 plants that actually manufacture the myco. And all these companies buy it from them then slap their own label on them. Then charge outrageous amounts.
This wallace organic wonder is cheap. And people have been getting stupid good results

300 propagules is the standard for good myco.
20190726_133425.jpg


WOW MYCO : 20 USD for 450 grams
GREAT WHITE MYCO : 40 USD for 113 grams

Granted (great white claims a bunch of vitamins and this and that extra but does that justify the insane price gouging?..........maybe it does never used it.

I'm just showing you what worked for me.

This is the day of transplant. I used about a teaspoon of WOW myco in each hole
20190626_132814.jpg

This is just 30 days later after transplant and using WOW myco.
20190724_170318.jpg

I dont use any nutes. Just RO water and organic hotsoil from stepwell soil.

Hood luck and happy growing.
 
Last edited:

Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
Awesome! I wish more peeps would grow organic like this. Good soil, compost, mycorrhizae, and clean water is all they need. Great white is a good myco product but there's so many other granular innoculants that work just as well. People like it I think mostly cuz sharks look cool on the packaging. There's really nothing extra nutrition wise in it over any other brand except it does have many beneficial strains of mycorrhizae. I use a white label generic brand or myco extreme; depending upon what's cheapest at the time.
The key here is the RO water. Of course you don't have to have reverse osmosis filtration but you do need a chlorine and fluoride free source of h2o to grow like this. Fungi is fundamental to a living soil grow along with microbial activity provided through compost but if all you got access to is city tap water you are sort of forced to use nutrients at some point.
 

JungleSlut

Well-Known Member
Awesome! I wish more peeps would grow organic like this. Good soil, compost, mycorrhizae, and clean water is all they need. Great white is a good myco product but there's so many other granular innoculants that work just as well. People like it I think mostly cuz sharks look cool on the packaging. There's really nothing extra nutrition wise in it over any other brand except it does have many beneficial strains of mycorrhizae. I use a white label generic brand or myco extreme; depending upon what's cheapest at the time.
The key here is the RO water. Of course you don't have to have reverse osmosis filtration but you do need a chlorine and fluoride free source of h2o to grow like this. Fungi is fundamental to a living soil grow along with microbial activity provided through compost but if all you got access to is city tap water you are sort of forced to use nutrients at some point.
I gotta say man it was people like you is the reason i spent 270.00 cdn on a 5 stage ro system.
In my city they use fluoride and chloramine heavy.
My ph before RO is 6.66
My ph after RO is 5.7

I water with that 5.7 (no ph up or down) and let the soil do the rest
No cal mag no nothing

Honestly what could be easier. Just add RO water. Its mindless worry free growing.
Love it
 

CanadianJim

Well-Known Member
Fluoride and chloramine in the water don't affect mycorrhizae. I've been using mycorrhizae for my hot peppers for years with hose water, and one year as a test I used just rain water in a couple of orange hab pots, and the others I used hose water. No difference in yield or size of plants, and when I dumped the pots into the composter you couldn't tell which was which.
Last year I switched to promix herb & vegetable (OMRI listed, so yes it's organic), so it already has mycorrhizal spores in it. No need to spend extra for another product.
 

JungleSlut

Well-Known Member
Fluoride and chloramine in the water don't affect mycorrhizae. I've been using mycorrhizae for my hot peppers for years with hose water, and one year as a test I used just rain water in a couple of orange hab pots, and the others I used hose water. No difference in yield or size of plants, and when I dumped the pots into the composter you couldn't tell which was which.
Last year I switched to promix herb & vegetable (OMRI listed, so yes it's organic), so it already has mycorrhizal spores in it. No need to spend extra for another product
You may be right. But theres too many variables involved to just say one size fits all.
Lots of experienced growers says you need RO water others dont.
All I know is its been working for me.
 

CanadianJim

Well-Known Member
RO water will work, for sure. I just think it's unnecessary. You'll find experienced growers are divided on the issue with no discernible differences between their results.
 

Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
RO water will work, for sure. I just think it's unnecessary. You'll find experienced growers are divided on the issue with no discernible differences between their results.
Watering from a hose won't hurt an outdoor garden especially if you added compost. Plus the rain eventually washes it out and provides microbes. I water my outdoor veggie garden from a hose too but my indoor mj plants get water reclaimed from a dehumidifier; they don't care as long as it is 2 parts hydrogen 1 part Oxygen. RO filtration is only necessary if you want to grow in natural soil and have no other access to "clean" water except the city tap. Chloramine levels differ from every system; my tap is like 125ppm whereas the dehuey water is 35ppm though I don't think I would ever drink it. Seems like overkill but it's not.

Don't want to start a debate on RO vs Tap water here. My point is that a noob grower might think their soil is "depleted" when in fact it is just inactive. A clean water source avoids the issue altogether. Could be from a stream, a well, or a bucket of rain. It is what the whole nutrient industry is based upon; the need for soluble npk & macronutrients in an otherwise sterile medium.
 

CanadianJim

Well-Known Member
Not looking for an argument either, but my indoor grows have convinced me there's nothing wrong with tap water.
 

JungleSlut

Well-Known Member
Not looking for an argument either, but my indoor grows have convinced me there's nothing wrong with tap water.

80% pure cocaine is still considered ok blow.
But 100% pure cocaine will blow your dick off.

Tap water probly sufficient
RO definately sufficient
 

Nutty sKunK

Well-Known Member
Very nice ladies there!

I’ve kinda gone the same route. Organic peat/worm castings and microbes (Soil balance Pro) and that’s it. They are very healthy and doing well considering they are growing at 54’ North.

I’ve been using rain water instead of tap water which I used the first grow with this set up.

The lack of chlorine is really helping. Considering my water is only 32ppm.
 

JungleSlut

Well-Known Member
And idk if the cocaine comment was just a joke but you won't get 100% even if you're buying direct from cartel..

It was a joke. However your response is just as funny.
You want 100%.
You take 93% pure cocaine u buy off an asian in winnipeg, mix it with 100% pure acetone anahydrous you buy at a chemical supply store and let insist throughb3 coffee filters. take the crystals then let it sit overnight so the acetone evaporates and walla. 100% pure cocaine.
If you cant get 100% acetone anhydrous take some magnesium sulphate (Epsom salts) bake it in an oven for 4 hours at 450 degrees. Scrape it off the tinfoil. Put it in a bottle of beauty store acetone let it sit for 24 hours and the magnesium sulphate will suck all the water out of the beauty store acetone leaving you with anhydrous.
It's called a acetone wash, it's like grade 9 science and your next door nabor could do it. Let alone a member of the cartel. The only reason it doesnt come 100% is because they rush the manufacture process its why some blow tastes like diesel because they haven't washed it well enough.
Unless your getting pure paste off them which is 100% pure I dont care what you think you know.

Let's not get it twisted and try and tell people what they can and get get when you have zero clue what's possible for another individual.
 
Last edited:

JungleSlut

Well-Known Member
Very nice ladies there!

I’ve kinda gone the same route. Organic peat/worm castings and microbes (Soil balance Pro) and that’s it. They are very healthy and doing well considering they are growing at 54’ North.

I’ve been using rain water instead of tap water which I used the first grow with this set up.

The lack of chlorine is really helping. Considering my water is only 32ppm.
I've got a 5lb tub of worm castings. I put a few layers at the bottom my supersoil for shits and giggles. I've read nothing but good things about them
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
After much research I found out Theres only 2-3 plants that actually manufacture the myco. And all these companies buy it from them then slap their own label on them. Then charge outrageous amounts.

I've been telling people that for years. The same stuff these cannabis specific nutrient companies are targeting cannabis growers with can be had for pennies on the dollar. The only difference is the packaging. The ingredients are the same and most come from the same place. But when you try and tell people that fact they don't want to listen. They just have to have their fancy brands. :wall:
 

JungleSlut

Well-Known Member
I've been telling people that for years. The same stuff these cannabis specific nutrient companies are targeting cannabis growers with can be had for pennies on the dollar. The only difference is the packaging. The ingredients are the same and most come from the same place. But when you try and tell people that fact they don't want to listen. They just have to have their fancy brands. :wall:
That's the beauty of these forums. If you can sift thru the bullshit, you can walk away with something new everyday.
 
Top