Posted by Dave Hill on April 2, 2010, 5:15 pm
I have been wondering about this fantastic plant food that we are
hearing about all the time and which is now being classified as a
class 1 drug, so at last I looked it up on Google.
http://www.miraclefeeds.co.uk/epages/es133371.sf/en_GB/?ObjectPath=/Shops/es133371/Categories/Mephedrone_Plant_Feed
If you believe that people would water this on their plants at the
price they are talking about..................
Well I suppose it might get your climbing plants high
David Hill
Posted by Stewart Robert Hinsley on April 3, 2010, 4:01 am
In message
>I have been wondering about this fantastic plant food that we are
>hearing about all the time and which is now being classified as a
>class 1 drug, so at last I looked it up on Google.
>http://www.miraclefeeds.co.uk/epages/es133371.sf/en_GB/?ObjectPath=/Shop
>s/es133371/Categories/Mephedrone_Plant_Feed
>If you believe that people would water this on their plants at the
>price they are talking about..................
>Well I suppose it might get your climbing plants high
>David Hill
WikiPedia tells me that the references to it being a plant fertiliser
are the media getting stuff wrong. Looking at the chemical composition
and structure, there's no way that's a sensible plant fertiliser
(excluding it acting as a plant hormone is harder). If anyone was
selling it as a plant fertiliser that would be a scam.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley
Posted by Derek Turner on April 5, 2010, 6:19 am
On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 09:01:18 +0100, Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote:
> WikiPedia tells me that the references to it being a plant fertiliser
> are the media getting stuff wrong. Looking at the chemical composition
> and structure, there's no way that's a sensible plant fertiliser
> (excluding it acting as a plant hormone is harder). If anyone was
> selling it as a plant fertiliser that would be a scam.
Apparently it comes in a packet that says something like 'Plant food: not
for human consumption"
This is the manufacturers/suppliers covering their backs.
Posted by Martin Brown on April 6, 2010, 4:16 am
Derek Turner wrote:
> On Sat, 03 Apr 2010 09:01:18 +0100, Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote:
>
>> WikiPedia tells me that the references to it being a plant fertiliser
>> are the media getting stuff wrong. Looking at the chemical composition
>> and structure, there's no way that's a sensible plant fertiliser
>> (excluding it acting as a plant hormone is harder). If anyone was
>> selling it as a plant fertiliser that would be a scam.
>
> Apparently it comes in a packet that says something like 'Plant food: not
> for human consumption"
>
> This is the manufacturers/suppliers covering their backs.
It is a classic piece of legal trickery. Selling it as "plant food" just
avoids various legal pitfalls. Plants cannot make use of it!
The government were just about smart enough to have banned sale for
human consumption of novel chemicals that have not been safety tested.
No such legislation protects plants.
Regards,
Martin Brown
Posted by Pam Moore on April 4, 2010, 1:11 pm
On Fri, 2 Apr 2010 14:15:57 -0700 (PDT), Dave Hill
>I have been wondering about this fantastic plant food that we are
>hearing about all the time and which is now being classified as a
>class 1 drug, so at last I looked it up on Google.
>http://www.miraclefeeds.co.uk/epages/es133371.sf/en_GB/?ObjectPath=/Shops/es133371/Categories/Mephedrone_Plant_Feed
>If you believe that people would water this on their plants at the
>price they are talking about..................
>Well I suppose it might get your climbing plants high
>David Hill
"pretty" website but I gather they are charging £15 for 1 gramme.
You could of course buy 50 g for £400.
Rather expensive plant feed!!!
Pam in Bristol
>hearing about all the time and which is now being classified as a
>class 1 drug, so at last I looked it up on Google.
>http://www.miraclefeeds.co.uk/epages/es133371.sf/en_GB/?ObjectPath=/Shop
>s/es133371/Categories/Mephedrone_Plant_Feed
>If you believe that people would water this on their plants at the
>price they are talking about..................
>Well I suppose it might get your climbing plants high
>David Hill