PicoAg, 805 Cottage Hill Way, Brandon Florida 33511
Email: donwilshe@biobased.us
Call 800 995-9203, 336 306-0193 Open 24/7/365
Game Changer Pico Technology 1,000,000 Times Smaller Than AgriChem's Mircon Technology
Adopt Pico Translocation Methods Or Your Business or Farms Expires! Biobased USA has obsoleted its
flagship product after 15 years "Soysoap" we have switched to PicoTechnoogy 1,000,000 smaller than Micron Technnology.
This provides world first multiple benefits product such as. "TRANSOLCATION" and more Crop Production,
Soil Remedaition and Pesticide (Bacteria, Fungi, Virus and Small Insects)
control wtih one product in the USA Only. No More Single Purpose Technology!!
Click and Go To PicoAg.com
First company in the world to sell organic carbon and nitrogen atoms, Now 15 years! Why can't farmers buy Organic Carbon Atoms! All plants and humans mass is 85% organic carbon! Dry weight of a plant is 90% Carbon from CO2 and 9% Nitrogen and .34% fertilizers!
Climate Changers do you know about Food, Starvation, Poverty and Farmer Suicides or enough food to feed us in 2050!
When you have zero CO2 you have zero farmers etc. Does that make any since Nadda!
Now for you Climate Changers, Who of you is gonna tell the farmers your gonna take $9.8 trillion from them!
This short film will help!, Congrads www.co2science.org, We only have the Pico-Ag 25B Atoms Farmily of AG Products Farmers Get your part of $10 Trillion Expanded Version! >
, Albert Einstein Says!
Education is what remains after one has forgotten what one has learned in school!
The only thing that interferes with your learning is your education!
The only source of knowledge is your own experience!
Change the way people think and basis technology and people will never be the same!
The day has come technology surpasses our ability human understanding.
Now we have a generation of idiots because college teaches 50 year old farming methods!
Thomas Cardinal Wolsey 1471-1530 Said! “Be very, very careful what you put in that head, because you will never, ever get it out.”
Thanks www.co2science.org Crop Production is it Agrichem, Nope! Its Mother Natures CO2!
,
Common Sense 7 Year old vs the Educated PhD's
We use Physical Chemistry to grow plants with free fertilizer!
,
Dr. Peter Rost Former VP Pfizer About Corrupt Industries. Junk Science, Corruption of Education, Student Loans Refund!
Below Farmers and Students, They never ever teach you this in University or explain in the fields.
Why, Because its good for them and they are paid not to tell you. Just try it!
NC, MD, TN and NY Yield Contest Results! Don't Be 3rd or Less!
2015 1st Place New York: Robert Pawlowski Central Region Soybeans, We also got 74.99 Bu/Acre
2015 1st Place New York: Robert Pawlowski Central Region Corn: We also got 263.87 Bu/Acre
2014 1st Place New York: Robert Pawlowski Central Region Soybeans, We also got 68 Bu/Acre
2014 2nd Place New York: Robert Pawlowski Central Region Corn: We also got 262 Bu/Acre
Note: 2012 - 2013 New York Farmer Robert Pawlowski Central Region has placed 1st or 2nd on Soybeans and or Corn last 4 years
2012 NCGA: Maryland: Corn: NCGA Class A No-Till Yield Contest 207 Bu/Acre
2016 NCGA: New Work: Corn: NCGA Class Non-Irrageted Yield Contest 264 Bu/Acre
2012 Univ of Tenn: Ext Agent Certified Wheat at 150 Bu Acre
2012 Univ of Tenn Ext Agent Certified Canola at 100 Bu Acre
2011 NC A&T University Certified: Silage Increased from 200 Tons to 400 Tons 16 acres.
2011 NC A&T University Certified: Alfalfa Increased from 3 to 5 cuttings annually, total of 1070 square bales 10 acres..
2011 NC A&T University Certified: Wheat Increased from 27 Bu/Acre to 72 Bu/Acre.
2011 NC A&T University Certified: Grain production Increased 50 Bu/Acre.
2011 NC A&T University Certified: Soybeans production Increased 19 Bu/Acre to 57 Bu/Acre.
2012 NCSU Ext Agent Certified: Barley 103 Bu/Acre
2012 NCSU Ext Agent Certified: Oats 133 Bu/Acre
2012 NCSU Ext Agent Certified: Wheat 125 Bu/Acre
2010-2012 NCSU Yield Enhancement Trails: An accomplishment over 3 years was winning the trails over some
great companies with physical chemistry! AgraQuest-Ballad Plus, ABM-Excalibre, Agri-Gro-Foliar Blend, Arysta-Evito 480, Arysta-Evito T, BASF-Headline, Bayer-Stratego YLD, Bayer-Trilex 6000, Bayer-Votivo, Becker Underwood-Vault HP, Conklin-Magnify,
Eden-ProAct, EMD-Optimize, EMD-Ratchet, Hanson-Hansen AZO, Naturym-Nutran, Stoller-Bio-Forge, Syngenta-CruiserMaxx, Syngenta-Quadris, Syngenta-Quilt, Valent-Domark and Valent-Inovate!
In 2013 Biobased Soysoap was reported by NCSU Soybeans Results at 74 Bu/Acre.
2011 Univ of Tennessee Canola Trails Using Soysoap Ranged from 90 to 100 bushels and acre!
2009 Through 2011 Soysoaped Soybeans OHIO Indiana Illinois
2009 Through 2011 Soysoaped Corn OHIO Indiana Illinois
NCSU: Soysoap Surfactant Out Performs Bio-Forge 1.7 Bu., and Pro-Act 2.2 Bu. Acre
NC Soybean Farmer video interviewed by Rick Patton of AG Professional Magazine about Soysoap Treated vs Untreated Soybeans. The publisher was
for 15 years a agri-chem soybean specialist. The fields were side by side, Same Seed, Same Weather, Same Ground and Fertilizer program. Only difference
was one field treated with Soysoap at 1st trifoliate, and other field unfortunately 3 weeks later. Eventually the untreated field was treated and but yielded more than control but 17 less bu per acre than the early treated.
Its all about timing, timing, and timing!
Soysoap Tops the Field for Increased Brix Levels, Electrical Conductivity (EC )(Microsiemens)
and "Carbon Dioxide Consumption"
Lets get serious about farming, Don't plant seeds until you understand this!
The Foundation of good crop production and lifecycle cost management is high Brix Levels, Increased Carbon Dioxide Consumption and Electrical Conductivity (EC )(Microsiemens). After that,
You should know how your going to increase (Microsiemens) in Soils, Chemicals, Fertilizers and Plants. Your consultant needs to be an expert in "Increasing Carbon Dioxide Consumption",
Plant Pathology, Entomology, Electrical Conductivity (EC) (Microsiemens) and Soil Science! When your consultant comes to your farm I would start by asking him! "How are
you going to increase my (Microsiemens), Plant Brix, Carbon Dioxide Consumption! And than, Ask his help with immobilized nutrient trans-location.
Treatment
Row
Brix
Sap PH
Sap EC (mS/cd)
Chlorophyll
Control
S6
10.2
5.5
11.4
39
Control
S21
9.5
5.4
11.0
41
Control
S30
9.0
5.6
10.5
40
Protein Plus
S9
11.6
5.7
12.5
41
Protein Plus
S24
10.5
6.0
11.9
45
Protein Plus
S27
12.5
5.8
13.0
41
KSoff
S3
12.8
5.9
14.2
43
KSoff
S18
11.6
5.8
12.0
42
KSoff
S36
12.4
6.1
11.3
42
Soysoap
S12
11.2
5.8
13.2
41
Soysoap
S15
13.5
5.8
12.8
42
Soysoap
S33
13.8
5.9
12.4
42
The SFI test are the facts that Soysoap is "Clear Winner" in raising Brix/Sugar levels, Increasing Carbon Dioxide Consumption and
Electrical Conductivity (EC)(Microsiemens). Soysoap topped all tested products with an average of 12.8 Brix and that is
33% higher than the control. This highlights how the products works at about the atom level and can work with all plants living cells as they electromagnetic
(Electric). To work atomically you cant use picotechnology (obsoletes Nanotechnology & Graphene) it is to big, you need an about atom size particle.
SFI said Sap EC (mS/cd) average was increased by 17% or 1.9 (mS/cd) Electrical Conductivity (Microsiemens) vs control. SFI proclaimed that Soysoap helps
increase Carbon Dioxide consumption by 33% over the control, i.e., more money to the farmer. Now you need to deal with
your soils remediation for chelated immobilized fertilizers and other nutrients which we can help you with before you plant!
The Competition did well: KSoff 2nd 12.25 Brix, Protein Plus 3rd 11.5 Brix, and Control 9.5 Brix.
These tests and their expert opinion were certified SFI (Soil Foodweb Institute),And Meag Consultancy, Colin Steddy, Australian, Wheat Trail: Brix,
Sap PH, Sap EC(mS/cd) Electrical Conductivity (Microsiemens), Chlorophyll, On 26 September about 15:15 - 16.20 at
Temp:72 F, Sunshine.
17 Years of Biobased Soysoap Research and Reports in 2008, 2010 and 2012!
Below is the 16 Page 2012 Soysoap Research Reports mouse click the image to load the PDF Report!
Above is the 16 Page mouse click the 2012 Soysoap Research Reports image to load the PDF Report!
Below is the 16 Page 2011 Soysoap Research Reports mouse click the image to load the PDF Report!
Above is the 16 Page mouse click the 2011 Soysoap Research Reports image to load the PDF Report!
Below is the 16 Page 2010 Soysoap Research Reports mouse click the image to load the PDF Report!
Above is the 16 Page mouse click the 2010 Soysoap Research Reports image to load the PDF Report!
Below is the 4 Page 2008 Spring Soysoap Research Reports mouse click the image to load the PDF Report!
Above is the 4 Page mouse click the 2008 Spring Soysoap Research Reports image to load the PDF Report!
Below is the 4 Page 2008 Fall Soysoap Research Reports mouse click the image to load the PDF Report!
Above is the 4 Page mouse click the 2008 Fall Soysoap Research Reports image to load the PDF Report!
Soysoap on Acid Sulfate Soils, Poor Land growing Wheat
WHEAT: - Jimmy Sanders Mississippi Wheat Trail on Ph 4 Acid Sulfate Soils.
Comments: James Miller, whose son is a Crop Consultant with the Jimmy Sanders Company in Indianola, Mississippi, applied Soysoap 2 on his wheat crop.
The 60 acre controlled plot made 87.27 bushels/acre and had a test weight of 60.5. The 60 acre trial plot yielded 97.11 bushels/acre
and had a test weight of 61.11. The yield difference was 9.8 bushels per acre! The treated wheat showed more tillering and kept a better
color. I do not know how Soysoap 2 works so well, but it does. I will definitely use it on every acre of wheat I grow,” said Miller..
Jimmy Sanders Video
<
5 Year Study of Soysoap at North Carolina Agricultural And Technology State University
Synthetic chemistry based agriculture products vs bio-Agrophysics the mode of action is pure energy at
1790 trillion particles (Do the math) per square inch. Although we have worked with over 30 University around the world on Crop Production and Crop
Protection, as well as IR-4 Bio-Pesticides. Based on limited space we have chosen NC A&T as representative of our common results.
In the USA we have worked with Research Farms, Independent Agronomist, World Re-known Plant Pathologist, North Carolina State University,
North Carolina Agricultural And Technology State University, U of Mississippi, U of Georgia, U of Florida, U of Kentucky, South Dakota State
University, Pennsylvania State University, Arizona State University, Rutgers, LSU and U of Tennessee. And in foreign countries either
governments for approvals and universities for data: Australia, China, Costa Rica, Thailand, Panama, Guatemala, Belize, Vietnam, India,
Ecuador, South Africa, Zambia and some more I cant remember of the last 17 years.
So lets take a moment to highlight NC A&T Observations of 2012 vs 2014 After starting in 2009!
Alfalfa with 2 applications went from 3 to 5 cuttings annually.
Alfalfa was noticeable different with growth, vigorous getting 1070 square bales or 26.75 tons 10 acres.
Wheat Arguments could be made that the fields soils were different, But soil samples showed soysoaped field had poorer quality soils.
Corn 2 application of Soysoap used for grain and silage
Corn Soysoaped silage increased from 200 tons to 400 tons on 16 acres.
Corn Soysoaped grain production increased from 50 bu acre to 25 bu acre.
Soybeans 2013 NCSU and NC A&T both reported 74 Bushels acre in best soils and 45 bushels acre in moderate soils.
After 5 years our conclusion of using the Soysoap has without a any doubt shown that this product can offer real crop vitality and production
benefits across all crops. There is more potential benefits yet to be determined which only time and more experience can answer! As a university farm that
has been instrumental in research, demonstration, teaching and production activities to help the small, minority and undeserved farmers of North Carolina,
it behooves us to further explore this product until we have enough consistent and consecutive data that we can share with those farmers. A product of this
nature can go a long way in closing the food production gap that will be ever increasing as he world population does the same. Our endeavor to include the small
farmer in this process can be strengthened by exploring products that potentially can make a the most crops on smaller acres which is not only reasonable, but should be
expected.
Florida Department of Environmental Protection Approval for remediation of petroleum and other suitable containments
for in groundwater and soil, in situ and ex situ! Other trails data available whereby we have reduced PPM of petroleum from 9300 PPM to 35 PPM. We have
also mobilized the Fe 10 times, Mn 15 times and Zn 40 times in soils SGS Analysis. The product is fracturing the elements to increase the PPM and re-mediates
soils from chemical chelation.
IRRI Bangladesh Rice Farmers Found Out: When Pesticides Weren't Used They Got No Pests!
Yes this is a soybean leaf with a 51 level of chlorophyll level
Yes this is a soybean leaf with a 51 level of chlorophyll level
Soysoap 3 was made especially for Wheat, Oats, Barley and Spring Grains Get Some Today!
2013 Alabama - Soysoap 3 for Fall Wheat used Dormancy and Look at the difference!
Today I got a call from a young farmer that tends about 6500 acres in Alabama. He thought his wheat looked pretty good,
and described it as dark green and blue colored, but wasn't super excited until he went to the co-op. Other farmers starting asking him 'what are you using?' He said 'I used Soysoap 3 a few weeks ago to bring the wheat out of dormancy. '
You see we had talked to him earlier in the day and told him that he needed to pull some plants and check the roots. Well that's when it got interesting, as he used a shovel and saw (picture below) at least a 6 inch difference between the treated and untreated. Than it even got crazier when he was telling an old time farmer about his wheat roots. Well the old timer had gone into his field 4 days earlier and saw the difference in color. So he pulled on the untreated and they came up very easy, but when he tugged on the treated planted they weren't coming out at all. Than he told the story to the young farmer about what he had done, and young farmer laughed and called and told me the whole story.
Well his brother came and saw the plants and took them to show his family that tends 5000 acres and another relative that tends about 4000 acres. And the last thing he said to me is ' I hope you guys are ready to support us, as we are going to make you busy this summer for sure on beans and corn.'
Univ of Tenn Certified Wheat and Canola Trails: Soysoap got Wheat 108 to 150 bushels, Canola 90 bushels. Now dont expect
to get 150 bu wheat but usually their is a 20 bu increase. The farmer reported on Canola his monitor hit 160 bu few times. We have seen results on
oats, millet and barley get around 60 bu increase. First time farmers are usually limited to 20 acre trails.
Click on Picture to expand
Click on Picture to expand
Click on Picture to expand
Over 142 Reasons Why You Cant Get Rich Farming!
It is a tough to make money.
Over 197 Reasons Why You Cant Get Rich Farming!
Activation, Aerial Spraying, Air Quality, Altitude, Anhydrous Ammonia, Bees, Wasp, Butterflies, Biobased Content, Biorationals, Biostimulation, Brix Management, Brix Level, Carbon, Carbon Dioxide, Cation-exchange capacity, Cations-Anions, Chlorophyll , Clean Spray Rigs, Climate, Contaminated Wastewater Consequences, Crop & Pesticide Rotations, Crop Air/Propane Drying , Dew Farming Wetter Water, Draves Water Restructuring, Drip Lines, Dry Matter %, EAFUS Additives, Electrical Conductivity, Electro-Mechanical Vs Active Ingredient, Evaporation, Excessive Dry Down Moisturization, Fertilizer Application, Fertilizer Metabolism, Fertilizer Minerals, Fertilizer Tractor Exhaust CO, Fertilizer Uptake, Fertilizers Manures, Field Location / Latitude, Field Slope, Field Topography, Flooding, Fogging, Foliar Applied Micro-Nutrients, Frost Protection, Genetic Potential, GMO, Ground Remediation, Grow Crops Faster or Slower by 2-4 Weeks, Hail, Herbicide Damage Remediation, In-Situ - Ex-Situ Re-mediate Contaminants, Increased Brix Levels, Induced Systemic Resistance (ISR), Ion/Cation Exchange, Irrigation, Late Planting Faster Growing Crops, Liebig's Law Of The Minimum, Macro nutrients, Magnetic Forces, Metabolisable energy, Micro nutrients, Mineral Absorption, Misting, Mobilization of Micro nutrients, Multi-Year Beneficials, N P K S Ca Mg Mn Mo Cu Fe B Cl Zn, Nitrogen Applications, No Fertilizer Farming, No Heavy Metals, No Pesticide Farming, No-Till, Nutrient Availability, Organic Fertilizer Pesticide Same Product, Oxygen, Pesticides & Timing, Pesticides Less, Pests – Weeds Insects & Diseases, PH, Photoperiodism , Photosynthesis, Pico Weed Kill Surfactants, Picotechnology, Pivots, Plant Population , Pollination, Previous Crop, Rain & Snowl, Relative Humidity, Respiration, Reverse Chelation of Nutrients, Root Growth Maximum, Rooting Depth, Salinity, Seed Population , Seed Quality, Seed Rate, Seed Treatment, Seed Variety, Seedbed Firmness, Seeding Date, Seeding Depth, Shelford's Law of Tolerance , Soil & Temperature, Soil Aeration, Soil Aggregate Size, Soil Air, Soil Crusting, Soil Drainage, Soil Erosion, Soil Moisture, Soil Nutrients, Soil Organic Matter, Soil PH, Soil Remediation, Soil Surface Residues, Soil Temperature, Soil Texture, Soil Type, Soil Washing, Soil Water Holding Capacity, Soil Water Infiltration Rates, Solubility, Solar Radiation, Spraying, Spray Tank Cleaning, Swath Data, Systemic Acquired Resistance (SAR), Test Weight, Tillage, Tillage ZT MT CT, Tillering, Timing, Translocation, Transpiration, Trophobiosis, Water Application, Water Pump Plants, Water Quality, Water Remediation, Weather, Weed Control , Wind Resistant Crops, Wind Velocity, Zeta Potential Air Pollution Stress
Avoiding Human Starvation and
Plant and Animal Extinctions
Bacteria
Biodiversity
Biogenic Volatile Organic Compounds
Biomass
C4 Plants
CAM Plants
Carbon
Sequestration
Diseases of Plants
Early Growth
Earthworms
Evolution
Flowers
Fluctuating Asymmetry
Glomalin
Health
Promoting Substances
Herbivory
Hormones
Human Longevity
Human Mortality
Iodocompounds
Isoprene
Light Stress
Lipids
Medicinal Plants
Monoterpenes
Nectar
Net Primary Productivity
Nitrogen Fixation
Nutrient Acquisition
Phosphorus Acquisition
Photosynthesis
Progressive Nitrogen Limitation
Reactive Oxygen Species
Root Exudation
Root Production
Salinity Stress
Seeds
Soil Erosion
Soil Toxicity
Starch
Tannins
Temperature Stress
Thylakoid Membranes
Transpiration
UV B Radiation Stress
Vegetative Storage Proteins
Water Stress
Water
Use Efficiency
Weeds
Wood Density
Every Wonder why your neighbors farmer crop might yield more or why you might have variations on your
own farm from field to field. Above is about 136! Soysoap our constant everything else is a variable.
16 Iowa Nebraska Kansas Farmers Tell Why Soysoap Is Profitable
This year we're expanding our report to include personal observations of farmers who've profited from the performance of Soysoap.
Several have applied it for three seasons and they plan to include Soysoap in their cropping program for 2013.
1. Mitch Ramsey, Osceola, IA If a neighbor was to ask me why I've sprayed Soysoap the past three years, I would tell them that if you get it on at the right stage
V1 to V2 it will increase your yield substantially, compared to unsprayed parts of a field. That's true especially if the season is dry.
You can dig soybean roots in the treated beans and see that they're about twice as big as in the untreated beans.
In 2011, we harvested some soybeans that yielded over 70 bu. an acre on our bottom land fields. That's the first time we've ever raised that kind of beans. Anywhere. Ever.
And we had some 57 bu. beans on our poorer hill ground. I'm really happy with Soysoap. Last year, 2011, was the first year I sprayed Soysoap when I was supposed to, at that early V2 stage.
If someone was to tell me I'm wasting a spray trip when beans and corn are at the one leaf to two leaf stage because no weeds have shown up and there's hardly any crop leaf area
I'd tell them they're wrong. That's when you need to get roots growing faster.
This season, we'll take a closer look at applying Soysoap in furrow, and then coming back again with a foliar at that V1 V2 stage. With all the weather challenges in southern Iowa,
it would be good to have more than one opportunity to add several bushels with Soysoap
2. Dale Lenz, Hillcrest Farms Ltd.,Vail, Iowa Soysoap has worked out really well for us. We tested it on a limited number of acres in 2009 before using it farm wide in 2010 and 2011.
In side by side strip trials, we found average yield increases using Soysoap of 2 to 3 bu. per acre in soybeans and 2 to 5 bu. per acre in corn.
More important to us is Soysoap's ability to allow plants better use of glyphosate, foliar fertilizer, micro nutrients, or whatever is sprayed controls with the Soysoap. Any yield increase after that is extra profit.
We use it three ways: mixed with glyphosate, mixed with foliar fertilizer, and alone as foliar spray. We use it with glyphosate on soybeans at the V3 stage, and at the V6 stage on corn.
We plan to continue Soysoap as part of our 2012 management plan.
3. Bruce Johnson, Osage, Iowa use Soysoap on ground and air applications with our micros, liquid fertilizers, 21 1 0 and Procidic.
Soysoap makes our spray lay down efficiently and smoothly. When we performed ground inspections of our aerial sprays done with Soysoap, there was a big difference in how the spray adhered
to the leaf compared to our aerial spray applications without Soysoap.
There was much better overall coverage and efficiency when Soysoap was used in the aerially applied spray at a rate of just 3 to 4 ounces per acre in about 5 gal. of solution.
Without it, the sprays beaded up, and significantly less spray reached the lower leaves. On ground applications we typically tank mix 6 ounces of controls Soysoap per acre along with our foliage applied materials.
Our crop health has been improving yearly using Soysoap as part of a sound nutritional program.
4. David Mohler, Frankfort, IN Since I started testing Soysoap in 2009, it has continued to provide positive> yield response. We are in a 50 50 crop rotation on 2,600 acres.
I was very surprised at our yield levels in 2011. Last September, I was not very optimistic on the 2011 crop. This would have been about a week before we began harvest.
The end result of our efforts were farm averages of 65 bu. per acre on soybeans and 183 bu. per acre on corn.
These averages are almost hard to believe with the severe stress that we experienced in July and August of 2011.
The corn average matches our 10 year average. The soybean average is 16 % above our 10 year average and is our second highest average next to 2010.
I am a Pioneer sales rep with roughly 40 customers. As I have met with all of them, it became very obvious that a huge difference in yield existed on other farms in a 15 mile radius of our place.
Many clients had fields that performed well. However, most did not come close to the consistency that we experienced on our farm.
Consistency over a variety of conditions and soil types is the greatest benefit that Soysoap is providing for our farm. By spraying Soysoap, I am convinced that improved plant health is
allowing greater consistency and higher average yields.
5. Bob Streit, crop consultant, Boone, IA We saw enhanced nutrient uptake when Soysoap was used with foliars, resulting in better plant nutrition. In beans, we noticed that aphids didn't show up in
areas where we had previously seen aphid problems. We attribute this to improved nutrition, resulting in a healthier plant signature that is less desirable to insects
6. Arlynn Aldinger, Wilcox, NE Our favorite use of Soysoap is with starter applied in the furrow for corn and soybeans. There is a definite yield response.
In 2011 when we added 3 oz. of Soysoap in our starter compared with just 1 oz. corn yields in strip trials went up
8 bu. per acre.
When we increased the Soysoap rate in our soybean starter blend from 1 oz. to 3 oz., the soybean yield rose by 6.9
bu. per acre. Those yields are profitable, but we wouldn't have noticed the increase without our combine yield monitor. There are so
many variables in every field and every season that yield benefits of that magnitude don't show up unless they're
measured carefully. I like Soysoap as a drift control when spraying crops. The
spray just stays together. It also makes nutrients and herbicides adhere to the leaf better. The applied material absorbs
faster and more completely. Usually we apply herbicide and foliar nutrients six or
eight weeks after the crop is up, and tank mix Soysoap with the other ingredients. So far, I haven't applied Soysoap at the 2 leaf stage.
7. Steve Henning, Clarksville, IA I have used Soysoap since 2009 and love it. Whenever my sprayer heads to the field, there's Soysoap in the tank. I top
off every spray mix with 3 to 5 ounces per acre of Soysoap. In 2010 I had my best soybeans over 60 bu. on sandy ground where I sprayed Soysoap at the first two trifoliate stage.
In 2011, the elevator was complimenting me on the consistently high test weight in corn. That was unusual, considering our weather stress.
After 2010, I haven't done yield checks. I just assume a yield benefit because I saw it in 2009 and 2010. I would use Soysoap anyway, just for improved weed control.
Glyphosate resistant weeds are showing up all over my area, but my fields are totally clean.
Soysoap with foliar herbicide makes the spray lay down
smoothly on leaves, and the herbicide penetrates in minutes.
I think we'll find more and more ways to use Soysoap, and
improve the performance of other nutrients and crop protection products.
8. Ron Monson, ag consultant, Detroit Lakes, MN Several of my dairyman clients have applied Soysoap, and two of them have told me they've seen more milk production.
We can't attribute that totally to Soysoap, as we've tried several new things. But from what our dairymen say, they intend to continue applying it on alfalfa and silage, as it
appears to raise nutritional quality. I'm also interested in seeing how Soysoap works with other ways to encourage soil biological life, such as applying
some raw milk on pasture. My clients have seen very encouraging results with milk, and it's gaining some attention in the media.
9. Tom Durr, Colo, IA In 2009 and 2010, our strip trials show that Soysoap applied at V2 has given us another 2.5 bu. of soybeans and usually 5 bu. of corn or better. In 2011,
it was hard to measure any yield improvement in treated areas because we had serious wind damage.
In the first week of July 2011, I walked our cornfields and
thought we had the best looking corn we’ve ever grown. There weren’t any leaves with brown on them; they were completely green, clear down to the ground. I really had high hopes for it.
Then on July 11, we had high winds that tore up our cornfields. Maybe 30% green snap. Our crop consultant said we lost at least
50 bu. an acre. Then for the rest of July and August, we didn’t have over two inches of moisture until it rained on Labor Day weekend.
Corn was hard to combine; I had to stay on the upwind side to avoid running over downed corn. But even with those problems,
we ended up with about 150 bu. average corn yields. Not a disaster, but we would have had 200 bu. or better without the weather setbacks.
I’m planning on using Soysoap again in 2012. Possibly I’ll
include some in the starter as well as the V2 application.
I’ve always wondered how that early application at the V2
stage can help very much, because there’s not a lot of leaf
area yet. However, the results with a V2 spray are profitable, and
anything we can do to increase early rooting has to raise yield
potential.
10. Brad Hockemeyer, Holland, IA I applied Soysoap on soybeans for the first time in July 2011, using it to mobilize a micro nutrient blend. I also
included sugar in the tank mix; I think that was helpful as a carbon source.
Where we sprayed this combination, we had the best soybean yield I've ever had 70 bu. per acre.
I attribute the Soysoap and micros, applied together, as giving us a 10 bu. yield increase compared to our unsprayed beans. We'll do this again in 2012.
I've been studying the impact of glyphosate on trace element tie up in soybeans and have to learn more about what
this means. I know you encourage tissue tests and we'll definitely look at that.
The spray coverage was smooth on the leaves, and the micros apparently absorbed quickly without runoff or droplets.
11. Rick Nervig, Hardy, IA What's most clear to me about Soysoap is that any spray tank mixed with Soysoap lays down smoothly on leaves. No droplets or runoff on either corn or soybeans.
That appears to make a real difference in herbicide effectiveness. When I sprayed volunteer corn in our soybeans with herbicide plus Soysoap, the corn was taken out faster than I've seen before
without Soysoap. (Photo)
I'm still unsure of another "test" with Soysoap in spring 2010. I had planted some soybeans really early. By May 6 the cotyledons were out. Forecasters warned us of severe frost for the night of May 8.
I took a chance: On May 6, I sprayed the field with 8 oz. of Soysoap in water, having heard that Soysoap increases leaf sugar somewhat. On the morning of May 9, 2010, all the beans were white
with frost. The reported low was 28 degrees. A lot of corn in our neighborhood was severely frosted.
By that afternoon, beans in that field looked dead. I watched them for a few days, and saw beans pushing new trifoliate leaves. We lost some population, but not enough to replant.
By May 19, the second trifoliate leaves had emerged and I sprayed Soysoap again, 8 ounces per acre. So that field had two applications of Soysoap by the time it reached the second trifoliate stage.
The 110 acres averaged 65 bu. per acre my best soybean field for 2010. But I can't say that was due to Soysoap. We didn't have any check strips. In 2012 I'll use 3 oz. per acre of Soysoap in
starter fertilizer, and then spray 15 in. bands of Soysoap over the row on corn and beans.
12. Joel Grabin, Oxford, IA In 2011, I had some weed escapes and tank mixed Soysoap with my herbicide to take out those large weeds. I really like the way Soysoap makes the spray lay down smoothly on broad leaf weeds.
I saw a few droplets on the fox tail, but the control was very good. Based on that experience, I'll use Soysoap in 2012 as a surfactant/mobilizer with trace elements and other foliars.
13. Shawn Weirich, Lawrenceville, IL I didn't have any test strips on wheat or second crop soybeans after wheat, but I saw what I needed to know.
I sprayed Soysoap on winter wheat as soon as it greened up in 2011. It made 71 bushels. My best wheat before had been 58 bushels. Then we planted soybeans following wheat and sprayed the beans with
Soysoap really early, right at the first one or two trifoliate leaf stage. The beans made 48 bu. per acre.
Actually the biggest response we've seen is in our garden and house plants, where we spray several times.
You'll be hearing from us for product in 2012.
14. Mark Underwood, Burr Oak, KS I've tested Soysoap for two seasons, 2009 10. In those seasons, I've seen treated soybeans generally yield 10 bu. more than untreated soybeans if I
apply Soysoap on time at that early V1 to V2 stage. The most clear cut result I've seen on soybeans was in 2010, when it was terribly dry here in north central Kansas. One wheat field was so dry
it only yielded about 20 bu., even though I had sprayed it with Soysoap in spring 2010. I disked up the wheat and noticed something unusual: The ground was mellow in spite of our drought.
I drilled soybeans July 5, double planting by running 90 degrees across the first drill rows, because late planted beans don't branch very much. We got a rain the next day, and the beans came up fast.
When they started showing the second trifoliate, I sprayed with Soysoap and glyphosate. Our next rain was Aug. 10, with almost no showers until harvest. The beans shaded out any volunteer wheat,
and grew waist high with pods all the way up. I've never seen anything like that on double crop beans.
They made 52 bu. per acre, and test weight was 61 lbs. per bu. or better. I'm gradually gaining confidence to get Soysoap on crops early, when wheat just breaks dormancy and beans show their first two trifoliate leaves.
I'm even noticing that my soil is more mellow where we've applied Soysoap for two seasons. We have a lot to learn about that.
15. Heath Seeker, Trenton, NE I had good row crops in both 2009 and 2010 where I applied Soysoap. This year I plan to spray test strips to measure yield benefits more exactly.
But as long as our crops keep improving each year, and our soil is gaining a better granular structure, I'll keep using Soysoap.
What I see is that our ground isn't powdery and doesn't crust over or blow as much. That could be a sign of more active soil organisms left from breakdown of the larger root structures from Soysoap applied early.
We had dry weather stress in 2011, and my corn came through very well it was a lot better than many of my neighbors had. Sunflowers and soybeans did well too.
In 2012 we'll try some Soysoap on yellow peas, then low with winter wheat.
16. Lonnie Luers, Keota, IA I first used Soysoap in summer 2011 as a surfactant and nutrient carrier. Our corn in southeast Iowa was under stress, and I wanted a broad spectrum foliar nutrient blend.
I tank mixed Soysoap with Rondo, Seed Set and Defender plus a copper product. Following this foliar application, corn leaves stopped deteriorating, ear development continued without tipping
back, and roots stayed healthy. I had over 200 bu. corn. The way I see it, Soysoap pays for itself with more effective use of foliar nutrients, which enhance yield. Because of trans location
data I had seen with Soysoap in 2011, I figure I can trim the rates of trace elements and NPK in my foliar a bit, and still make them very effective. In 2012 I plan to spray Soysoap with Defender
trace mix and molasses at V1 V2, going for bigger root growth. Then depending on tissue analysis, I will probably come back at V4 V5 with Procidic, 8 19 3, molasses and traces.
Before tassel, I'll apply Soysoap, Defender, molasses and a copper product, plus 21 1 0. With good nutritional health, I hope there will be less need for rescue treatments such
as fungicides. Later I'll also apply a bulking foliar to assure good ear fill. This program will apply to some test fields. I also encourage soil biological life and fertility by using
soft rock phosphate, humates, micro nutrients, and sugars from mineral rich molasses. (And by not using 0 0 60!) There is no magic bullet but every biologically sound growth aid can help
build a few more bushels per acre.
How you can profit with Soysoap in 2015, Translocation and Assimilation Technology
1) The Use Of The Soysoap is all about one thing timing! If The timing is off you will have less production, The product can be used
from 1 to 7 times. BURN DOWN, PLANTING, HERBICIDES PASS, 20 DAY PUSH, OPTIONAL 30 DAY PUSH and FROST protection. It really depends on what works best for you.
97% of the farmers only use the product for Planting and Herbicide Passes, But these are our recommendations and why! In the future we believe as the farmers get a better understanding they
will adopt it for BURN DOWN as well.
2) BURN DOWN: Soysoap can be used for no till farmers at BURN DOWN Herbicide pass and we highly recommend you add AMS to help with Weed Kill. Weeds are becoming harder to kill
and the really dont like herbicides but farmers say they are seeing 2 days weed kill. The weeds seem to love the Soysoap and AMS anyways and dont stop growing while waiting for the herbicide to dissipate!
The other benefits you get at BURN DOWN usage is Spray Rig Cleaning and EC Soil Remediation. This product will mobilize the tied up nutrients from chelation, and this was best explained by our
"The Missing Link" for fertilizer article link above.
3) * PLANTING: Soysoap can be used with a liquid at 3 oz per acre with 10 gallons of water at seed planting in seed furrow or 2x2. If you dont have a liquid planter than you will have to wait until the plant is at the
3 leaf stage and you will be broadcasting your spray and use 5 oz per acre with 10 gallons per acre.
4) * HERBICIDE PASS: Soysoap can be used with your Herbicide pass and we highly recommend you add AMS to help with Weed Kill. Weeds are becoming harder to kill and the really dont like herbicides but farmers say they
are seeing 2 days weed kill. The weeds seem to love the Soysoap and AMS anyways and dont stop growing while waiting for the herbicide to dissipate!
5) 20 DAY PUSH: Soysoap can be used last time 20 days passed Herbicide Pass to push the crops.
6) ANOTHER 30 DAY PUSH, Soysoap has been used for extending the time a plant can grow. Simply put a 100 day crop can extended grow for 130 Days.
7) FROST PROTECTION, Soysoap has been used for Frost protection on Corn, Soybeans, Tobacco and Tomato.
In all cases call Biobased to review your Soysoap Application Program before you apply Soysoap on your crops. Most farmers only use the product twice at Planting and Herbicide Pass!
If your entire Spray Rig is not clean you can have Chemical Crop Damage or Some Lost Crop Yield. If you contract your spraying and see
leaf or plant damage its most likely your contractor did not clean out properly his spray rig. If you dont have a clean rig you can put down the wrong chemicals
on your crops. This can kill your crops if not drastically reduce your crop health and yields. Its been reported to us that since major spray companies have started to use this product they have never had to buy a field
from chemical damage.
Pico Ag has developed a Picosoap that has the smallest particle size in the world at 1/2 of 1 nanometer or 6 Picotechnologys. Simply put
6 Picotechnologys is like comparing your pinky finger to the size of the earth. What that means is this molecule size soap can get into places that surfactants,
ammonia and existing tank cleaners cant, so you can get crop damage simply put. This
product can thoroughly clean years of accumulated chemicals out of your spray tank, caked chemicals in your pumps, filters, nozzles, and
lines. This video is worth watching and listen to the farmer described the product. Farmer dumbfounded and says where did all this
color come from, it was years of accumulated chemicals caked in the pumps. Also a side note our Soysoap 2 product has recovered several chemicals damaged field and reversed the damage to
give the farmer all time high yields on cotton, soybeans, tomatoes, tobacco and more. One thing we constantly hear from our farmers
is this is the most unbelievable spray rig cleaner they have ever used. We have a link to several universitys that state problems with dirty spray rigs.
Enuff Shown, The picture has just been sent and I have limited information. This "Timothy Hay" was grown
in land 500 miles north of Vancouver, Canada with a PH of 4, The heads on the crops are 8 inches long as you can see and are still growing.
We have not run an RFV for protein on the Timothy. We expect more information shorty and call us if you want current status.
When we investiaged Timothy we read that Timothy general grows from 2 to 3 inches, not 8.
You cannot make a tree or plants grow like this with fertilizers, Foliars or BioStimulant in one year, PicoAg 25B or Only with CO2!
If so Vegetable and Major Crops would look like this! Maybe that is why Pico Ag plants are chest high!
Pico Ag
Pico Ag 805 Cottage Hill Way, Brandon, FL 33511 USA http://www.biobased.us
Phone: 336 306-0193 or 800 995 9203
Email: donwilshe@biobased.us
--->
20 Years making products from Atoms
Applications for Pico-Technology Websites:
Pico Ag
Donald Wilshe
805 Cottage Hill Way
Brandon, Fl 33511
Email: donwilshe@biobased.us
Phone USA 800 995-9203 Direct to Cell.
Phone USA INTL 336-306-0193
http://www.biobased.us
http://www.biobased.us/Atoms%20of%20Elements%20for%20Fertilizer.html
http://www.biorationals.com
http://www.caribbean-agriculture.com
http://www.femtotech.us
http://www.femtotechnology.us
http://www.irritable-bowel-syndrome.us
http://www.out-of-the-box.com
http://www.physical-physics.com
http://www.pico-agriculture.com
http://www.pico-medicine.com
http://www.pico-physics.com
http://www.pico-technology.us
http://www.biobased.us
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http://www.picomed.us
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