Untitled Document

Research

Research and document non-genetic seeds, plants and nutrients vs. a wide range of environments. Currently we are testing Yield Plus (an organic plant nutrient solution based on a derivative of L-cysteine) on a wide variety of edible plants from seed through the lifespan of specific major crop varieties.

Goals

Increase and track crop growth while sustaining heat, cold and environmental events which would normally kill germplasms at any stage of life. Document and test organic nutrients, organic fertilizers on plants using a stable variety of natural soil platforms.

Get ready for the 2009 year, students. We will have pre-registration ready in December. Check back often for details.

At this time we are accepting testing applications for organic nano, micro and natural fertilizers.
The practice of natural agriculture is the harmony between the plant and soil as a match. With good seed and "adequate" soil one can produce successful plantings and a bounty of harvests. The enhancement of soil through fertilizers, and composting has been throughout history the advantage and the pursuit of technology has helped support the development of numerous natural AG products. It is the goal of this University to match natural soil & airborne enhancer's with certified seed to elevate the previous level of production known for any given germplasm.

Our research at this time involves food production germplasms and the purity of our work is foremost and always in check. Why? Adison is the designated US testing station for Yield Plus and there are many farmers, home growers, nurseries and government agencies who are looking for pure, documented results on how this advanced organic nutrient will work with plants, soil treatments and fertilizers. Question: Not if, but how much will production increase?

Respect for nature is our first concern and our research uses seeds that are are free from genetic modifications but do include heirloom, hybrid and rare seeds in the hopes we can increase production and help keep some strains alive that are now struggling to survive.