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Biplantol's Soil Blog


Why Should I Be Interested In Biplantol?

We were contacted by a potential customer the other day questioning why should folks use homeopathy for plants.  This is such a key question.  

Biplantol and its homeopathic dynamic formula works both on a cellular and an energetic level.  The formula is based on all the nutrients plants need for strong, vigorous growth, strong immune systems, and active metabolism.  Biplantol works to bring into balance the symbiotic relationship between the soil and the plants (roots).  The final result in giving your soil and plants a healthy, nutritious ecosystem to grow in will be the produce your plants put out.  Your vegetables will have a much better chance to produce beautiful, nutritious food.  I believe whatever we use to help our growing friends produce comes through to the vegetation.  Whether that product we choose to use is organic compost, or commercial fertilizer, that will become part of the plant that grows our food. 

We believe it is important to think about what you are putting in the soil used to grow your food.  It is important to use both yard waste type compost as well as composted manure.  This mixture will provide a fuller spectrum of both microorganisms and nutrients for your plants.  I am not a proponent of using fertilizer and plant food, other than some organic plant foods.  I believe in using composted organic matter such as, leaves, grass clippings, woody plants, and manure to create a healthy, vigorous compost, which should be added to gardens annually.  I would suggest adding compost tea, compost, vermicompost etc. as opposed to fertilizer.  All these suggestions are important because they support the microorganisms, and if you have happy microorganisms you will have happy plants, plants that are less likely to be infested by bugs and disease since those microorganisms also keep pathogens in check naturally.  In a healthy ecosystem you should also have plenty of earthworms.  They are important since they also breakdown organic matter and while in your garden, leave their own vermicompost which is reportedly the most nutritious compost available.

All gardens have some problems with infestations.  They are a part of nature.  Biplantol can also be used as a foliar spray.  If your plants do have infestations try spraying Biplantol to the foliage, stems, bark, etc.  Keep after the bugs with the hose or by picking them off and crushing them or as I do, drop them in a jar of soapy water (I can’t take the crunch!) as often as you can.  You can try insecticidal soap which is non-toxic.  Also the Biplantol does have a fungal component to it. 

The important point I am trying to make here, is a vital, healthy, active, ecosystem has its own checks and balances system.  If you feed that ecosystem what it is really craving, which is organic matter, it will flourish.  If you use products that are supporting the natural balance of the ecosystem, you will not be inadvertintly damaging it, you will rather be assisting it through difficult times.  When we really nurture the parts of our lives we love, this is reflected back to us through the fruits of our labor…


Who is Biplantol USA?

Last year I co-founded a company that is dedicated to addressing the needs of soil, plants and the symbiotic relationship that exists between them. Our company is called Biplantol USA and its product is Biplantol. Biplantol is a homeopathic soil and plant strengthening formula that was developed about 25 years ago by Konrad Würthle for remediation of endangered forests during the discussions of forest die-back in the seventies and eighties. Konrad Würthle (pictured below), the developer of BIPLANTOL® and founder of Bioplant Naturverfahren GmbH, developed a homeopathic active agent for plants, based on the biochemical cell salts according to Dr. Schüssler and his experience in human naturopathy.
Biplantol is organic, is a homeopathic dynamic formula, is formulated according to bio-dynamic principles, and it is 100% non-toxic to humans, animals, plants, and the environment. Biplantol is a liquid formula which is diluted and sprayed on plants to be absorbed by the bark, leaves and needles, or is used as a watering solution and soaks into the soil and the plants’ root system. Biplantol assists the microorganisms in the soil by stimulating the mycorrhizal fungi and in turn the plants are assisted in detoxification and stimulation of the metabolism. Under these conditions the microorganisms in the soil and the plants in the soil are stimulated, the plants are able to grow fuller root systems which allows them to absorb more available nutrients and moisture from the soil.
The real benefit from incorporating Biplantol into your gardening efforts, houseplant care, or farming is in the increased health to the soil. When soil is nourished the structure of the soil improves in its texture – in other words, it has a better crumble factor. It sticks together without compacting. The beneficial organisms that live in the soil get very active, including earthworms, and all this activity means your soil will be more nutritious and will be able to hold more moisture. This is good news for your plants because they will be able to grow more roots, that will be able to absorb more nutrients and moisture – this helps your plants to be more resilient when facing stresses like drought, disease, and infestations.
Biplantol is not a fertilizer or a plant food – it is a soil and plant medicine. Soil needs good organic matter in order to continue producing the nutrients necessary for healthy plant growth – and if you practice a few simple rules of good gardening habits, and incorporate Biplantol as a boost up for your soil and plant health, you will undoubtedly both contribute to and reep the benefits of having a strong and healthy ecosystem.konrak-resized-510-x-383


The Symbiotic Relationship Between Soil and Plants

So, why am I going on about this? I realize I didn’t get to thinking this way because I’m unconscious or destructive – I think this way because its the way of the common culture. The common culture says life should be carefree, easy; the common culture says give us your problem, and some company will fix it for you. So, my plant died, what should I do. Well, feed it plant food, buy this fertilizer, it has everything your plants need…
Well actually that’s not true. What my plant really needs, the soil must supply. My plant and my soil have a symbiotic relationship. If my soil is unhealthy it will not be able to breakdown the decaying organisms, organic matter, and waste that its living ecosystem is supplying. Perhaps the soil on your land has been disturbed by new construction, or is toxic due to some accidental hazardous spill, or some unknown event from the past.
What I have come to understand is that humans cannot make soil do what we want it to do unless we take the time to register what cannot be seen with the naked eye. Soil is a living system. It is a system that our lives depend on. If we tear up its natural structure, throw chemicals at it, over-use it without replenishing its needs – what we will end up with is dead soil that me may not be able to resurrect.
This journey is about how we can change the way we understand soil as a living system, a valuable resource that supports our humanness, how we can become proactive for that which sustains us, brings us pleasure both visually and by way of the palate – for a world lacking the ability to grow would be unimaginable not just for humans, but for all life. fresh-vegetables


The Plight of Soil

Have you ever wondered what is going on in dirt? Most of my life I never really thought about it, but lately I have begun to realize that what one does not see, one does not see. In other words, if we don’t see something than it doesn’t exist for us. I believe this is the plight of soil. The basic problem is that we humans are dependent on what is going on in the soil. Did you know that in a simple handful of soil there are billions of living organisms? Did you know that all those living organisms have distinct functions? If we humans supported those functions, rather than attacking what we believe is a problem, we might begin to understand that working together with those microorganisms could be a whole lot more productive.
Unfortunately most of us look at soil as inert, just something we plunk plants down in and the plants are supposed to grow and either look beautiful or produce something edible. And if that plant doesn’t grow well, or perhaps dies, we say oh well, maybe I didn’t take good enough care of it. Perhaps I need fertilizer, or plant food, or any number of man-made substances. So we go about “taking care” in the ways we have been led to believe mean taking care of something.
So what does it mean to take care of soil?composted-soil


How Do Humans Relate to Soil?

Hi,

My name is Merry Hutter.  I am beginning a blog because I would like to talk about where we humans are in the scheme of things.  I have for a long time believed that health and nutrition is a basic human right, but it is also basic to every other being on this planet.  I have studied holism, holistic nutrition, and evolution of consciousness - these interests have brought me to the most basic understanding of life.  We living beings are dependent first on water, and second on sustenance.  In order to live we must drink and eat.  The real focus of this blog is to discuss how we humans relate to soil – do we understand how vitally important soil is to our survival?



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