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ecmn | Regular sugar is a carbon source. It's not going to hurt the seedling at all
A little bit helps stimulate biology, but it's non-selective so if your soil is already biologically dysfunctional well you might be waking up your high ratio of bad bugs over your good ones.
Carbon is also a nutrient sink. Too much of it and you can pull nutrients away from your seedling. So you can get a temporary yellow flash in the corn. It's also going to compete with the soil life itself against your seedling. They're going to take that nitrogen and go to that carbon to break it down they're going to focus on the carbon not your seedling.
What do you expect the carbon to do in a seed trans for you?
Are you looking to build a biological system or just adding a biological stimulant to your normal system?
How does a shot of carbon compliment your current system?
If we are providing 100% of the plans nutritional and health needs synthetically what room is there for a biological stimulant to do much of anything?
What is the carbon nitrogen ratio of the soil and more importantly the parts per million of each component that make that ratio of your water extractable carbon low?
That tells us if your soil is a biological engine that's ready to run or simply starving for carbon.
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