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The
Field Report
Page 7
EXPOSING THE
DIRT DOCTOR
A MEDLEY OF
MISINFORMATION
John Howard Garrett,
the "Doctor of Dirt," is a personable, reasonably intelligent man, who
has set himself up as an expert in organic gardening and "natural"
nutrition, an overall program he calls "The Natural Way." As such, he
professes to espouse a worthy cause that few would argue with.
Unfortunately, though,
instead of informing himself and then sticking to factual and verifiable
information, he swears by unsubstantiated "anecdotal evidence" and what
amounts to wishful thinking. And, as if to impress his audience with
his vast store of knowledge, he dishes out a totally unnecessary stream
of what might be termed, kindly and politely, as "misinformation."
For example, during
May and June of 2000, the "Doctor of Dirt" repeatedly told his radio
listeners that every black plastic pot at the nursery, from 2 inches to
40 gallons, is coated on the inside with a copper material as a root
pruning device.
Only he could
explain why he deemed it necessary to invent such a tale. Ordinary
nursery pots have no coatings of any sort, but growers can order
copper-coated pots if they require them. Check out the facts at
Nursery Supplies, Inc.
What he hopes to gain
from such remarks is difficult to fathom. Perhaps, his more outrageous
statements are due to some unfortunate personality quirk or to a
deep-seated complex, rooted in his own ignorance and fed by his obvious
distrust of scientists and almost anything they do Or maybe his is just
the carefully contrived spiel of a consummate con artist.
In any case, he must
consider that his audience is either ignorant or brain dead, since he
seems to be unconcerned that anyone will know enough to recognize his
obvious fallacies -- or will bother to check out the validity of his
statements. And this arrogance often causes him to make a fool of
himself.
For example, in August
of 2001, the "Dirt Doctor" received an e-mail plea for help in combating
an infestation of dodder. "...there is an area where
the trees and bushes are covered with dodder," the message read, "Do you
have any ideas on how it can be controlled?"
For gardeners who
don't know what dodder is, a 10-minute trip through the internet via a
search engine will reveal that it is a pervasive, vigorous, parasitic
weed that spreads rapidly by seed. Originally classified as a member of
the morning glory family (Convolvulaceae), it can only be
controlled with a herbicide and/or by pulling it out and applying a
pre-emergent. In spite of this, the "Dirt Doctor" replied, "I have no
idea how to control it or what caused it but I would try spraying strong
mixtures of potassium bicarbonate and go from there."
Of course, any
thinking gardener who knows that dodder is a plant, would wonder why the
"Dirt Doctor" would even suggest that it might be controlled by spraying
with a mild fungicide.
A second example is
his statement on November 16th of 2001 that "now is when the
organiphobes are making recommendations to use Fungi-Kill or Orthotox to
kill fungal diseases on Saint Augustine grass."
Perhaps he was just
trying to be cute and made up a couple of what he believed to be fake
names for effect. If so, he failed miserably because the names aren't
fakes. Madurox Fungikill is a water-based curative and preservative
for wood. And ORTHOTOX, manufactured by Sipcam-Phyteurop, is an
insecticide used for plant lice on apples and pears. Neither would ever
be used as a fungicide for grass. So, whether he made up the names or
not, he succeeded again in making a fool of himself.
And then, there was a
third example on his radio program of September 22, 2002, when he said,
"I have a tool for getting rid of dallisgrass. It's ferrous oxide on
the end of a wooden pole, and it's called a hoe."
Ferrous oxide? That
would be a novel gardening tool. Ferrous oxide (FeO) is a black powder
used to stain glass and for making various abrasives. It is highly
flammable, chemically reactive, and quite dangerous to be around. So it
might get rid of more than just the dallisgrass.
Often, his
ill-informed remarks can be tested for validity merely by reading a
product label. For instance, in his newspaper column of March 28, 2003,
the "Dirt Doctor" set out to dispute a comment he claimed was made by a
garden consultant, who said, "Fungicides are not toxic to anything but
the disease pathogens." But, instead of pointing out real and valid
data, he apparently just concocted a collection of lies and
exaggerations, assuming that none of his readers would bother to check
out his statements.
In this column,
he included what he said was "paraphrased" information from the product
labels of Daconil, Captan, Bayleton, Alamo, Banner, Funginex, and
Terraclor. For each fungicide, he listed one or more toxic
attributes. But a quick and cursory glance at the
data provided by the
Pesticides Action
Network, an
organization with no love for chemical pesticides, showed that his
information was false or distorted for every product checked. Here are
just a few examples.
Daconil - toxic to
roses (recommended for black spot of roses)
Captan - toxic to apple trees (recommended for apple trees)
Bayleton - toxic to fish (aquatic toxicity rating:
slight)
Alamo/Banner - toxic to fish (aquatic toxicity rating:
slight)
Funginex - toxic to pear trees (validity of this was not checked)
Terraclor - can be toxic to bean and tomato plants (recommended for
beans, tomatoes)
But it soon becomes
obvious that he doesn't read labels. Or, if he does, he doesn't
understand them. For instance, in his newspaper column of August 1,
2003, he answered a question from A.M. of Dallas, "Roundup works
primarily on grasses, not on broadleaf or woody plants."
When in print for all
to see, this is a dangerously false statement. As described in
Complete Guide to Pest Control, Roundup® is a "highly versatile
translocated, non-selective herbicide, useful for the control of many
annual and perennial grasses and broadleaf weeds."
The following is a
further, but small sampling of documented examples of his gems of
"misinformation." Examine these and read the pages at this website
devoted to his descriptions of
diatomaceous earth,
lava sand,
and what he refers to as
volcanic rock powders.
Then decide for yourself about the real knowledge and the actual motives
of this self-anointed and self-serving "Doctor of Dirt."
Begin by asking
yourself if he is less than truthful and believes that his flock suffers
from an attention deficit disorder when he issues contradictory
statements, as illustrated by these regarding his favorite soil
amendment:
9/8/95:
"I learned about lava sand from
Phil Callahan,
the scientist who taught me to add lava sand to
the soil."
3/22/96:
"Commercial rose growers and home-gardener rosarians were the first to
tell me about the advantages of lava sand."
12/13/98 and 12/17/00:
"Orchid is the plant that started me thinking about lava sand."
Here are two more of
his conflicting statements. And, since they were issued only a mere
three weeks apart, they call into question his own
attention span:
10/26/97:
"Fireblight is caused by a virus."
11/15/97:
"Too much nitrogen is what causes fireblight."
Not only do these
statements conflict, but neither of them is true. According to
Westcott’s Plant Disease Handbook, fireblight is caused by a
bacterium, Erwinia amylovora. Thus, it can be and is treated with
streptomycin, a bactericide.
Then, almost three
years later, he demonstrated that he hadn't learned anything more about
fireblight -- and very little about neem oil, an important pesticide for
organic gardeners.
6/4/00:
"Neem, used as a drench on the soil, is very effective against
diseases like fireblight."
Of course, neem oil is
not a bactericide, an anti-viral agent, or a nitrogen reducer and is,
therefore, useless against fireblight. Also, it's relatively
ineffective as a drench in the alkaline soils of North Central Texas.
(See the explanation of this below.)
Equally puzzling is
what he wrote on page 6 of the August, 1999, issue of his club bulletin,
The Dirt Doctor's Dirt: "Sometimes labels
throw you a curve. Neem is a great example ... because
the label says it's not safe for vegetables. This fluke came about
because of the onerous EPA labeling requirements ..."
Then, during his radio
program on Sunday, August 22, 1999, he said, "There's only one place to
get neem now. It's the Green Light line."
Again, this was all
nonsense and more evidence that he doesn't bother to read labels.
First, there were and still are several different neem products on the
market. And, second, all the Green Light products at that time (Rose
Defense™, et al) were clearly labeled for use on edible crops.
To illustrate further
his ignorance about neem oil, witness the following
statement.
7/17/99 and 4/30/00:
"When sprayed on the leaves, neem doesn't have any systemic qualities.
When used as a drench on the soil, it does."
A publication by
Montana State University reads, "Neem has some systemic activity when
applied as a foliar spray, but it seems to work best as a systemic when
applied as a soil drench...(However) alkaline soils,
such as we have in most of Montana (and in North Central Texas), reduce
the effectiveness of neem drenches."
The Dirt Doctor"
claims many attributes for lava sand, but there's often a fine line
between exaggerating or being mistaken and flat out lying. During his
radio program on April 13, 1997, the 'Dirt Doctor" said, "Lava sand has
a high exchange capacity, which is the ability to hold water and
nutrients. Measurements are: sand only, 1 to 2; black
gumbo, 45 to 50; and lava sand 200 to 300."
The Lava
Sand Facts Report, freely available from the supplier, Twin
Mountain Rock Company, lists the exchange capacity as only 4
milliequivalents per 100 grams. Since the "Dirt Doctor" claims that he,
personally, talked this company into marketing lava sand, how can he
possibly not have seen this one-page fact sheet? (Furthermore, cation
exchange capacity has nothing to do with water-holding ability. For
more details and the results of a test of water adsorption and holding
capacity, see
Lava Sand.)
Ignorance often makes
it difficult to fabricate even a credible sounding lie. For example,
speaking of fireplace ashes on March 13, 1998, the "Dirt Doctor" stated, "When
I had a fertilizer analysis done on my own ashes, they did test very
high in potassium, sodium, magnesium, phosphorous, and nitrogen -- but
were very low in soluble calcium."
According to Rodale’s
Chemical-Free Yard & Garden, "(Wood ashes) contain 20 to 50
percent calcium carbonate, depending on the type of wood." Furthermore,
Rodale and other publishers give the typical N-P-K content of wood ashes
as 0-1.2-2 (leached) or 0-1.5-8 (unleached). Note that the nitrogen
content is zero, zilch, zip, rien, nil, nada for both leached and
unleached ashes.
His statements about
rose pruning are just as bizarre. At least three times -- on January 31,
1997, on February 16, 1997, and again on February 5, 1999 -- the "Dirt
Doctor" said, "The Brooklyn Botanic Garden has experimented with
hedge-trimmer pruning of roses. I get their newsletter."
That certainly sounded
definitive. But, when asked about this, Steven Scanniello, author and
long-time curator of the Cranford Rose Garden at the Brooklyn Botanic
Garden, replied, "I don’t know what he’s talking about. We’ve never done
anything like that."
That he knows little
about roses is illustrated by statements such as this one from the
February, 2003 issue of The Dirt Doctor's Dirt:
"There are two basic types of roses -- Hybrid and Old or Antique roses."
Do you suppose he
thinks that old or "antique" roses aren't hybrids? And that hybrid
roses and old roses constitute two "types" of roses? Doesn't he know
that, except for the relatively few species roses, all roses are hybrids
and that age has little or nothing to do with it?
On January 12, 2001, his newspaper
column included a question from T.N., Dallas: "How and
when should we dig up wild roses for transplanting? Also, where can we
buy native roses?" The "Dirt Doctor" answer (in part) was:
"Many garden centers that sell organic products also sell antique roses
and wild Texas roses."
It's obvious from this that he has no
idea what a "wild Texas rose" is. And he isn't likely to find one for
sale at any local garden center.
Further illustrating
his general ignorance of roses (and of fundamental botany, for that
matter), the "Dirt Doctor" has said several times, and as recently as
November 14, 1999, "You can't take cuttings from 'hybrid roses' because
they're not on their own roots. You won't get the exact same plant.
Take cuttings of antique roses instead because they're on their own
roots."
While you ponder that
classical bit of empty-headed reasoning, check out these additional gems
of "misinformation," with comments and verifiably factual information
appended inside brackets.
Plants for Texas,
University of Texas Press, 1996, page 141:
"The ‘Music Rose’ is a very fragrant old rose that is now commercially
available."
[According to Dobson
and Schneider's Combined Rose List, no rose by that name is or
has ever been sold anywhere in North America, Europe, or Australia.]
And on page 5 of
Plants for Texas, on the subject of soils the "Dirt Doctor" wrote,
"A balanced soil should have approximately the following percentages of
available nutrients: calcium -- 65-70 percent,
magnesium -- 12-22 percent, potassium -- 4-5 percent, and adequate
amounts of sulfur, iron, copper, zinc, molybdenum, boron, manganese, and
other trace minerals."
[In the context of his
understanding, he completely omitted nitrogen and phosphorous -- and
left little or no room for them. Also, he seems not to realize that
anything more than 2000 parts per million (ppm) calcium is considered
"very high," and that 65 percent would amount to 650,000 ppm.]
[Actually, though, he
probably copied these numbers off of some soil analysis reporting form.
What the "Dirt Doctor" doesn't understand is that they represent, not
the desirable amounts present in a soil, but ranges of "base saturation"
values for nutrient cations. That is to say, they represent the typical
percentages of the cation exchange sites occupied by each of the listed
elements in an alkaline soil in a semiarid region.]
9/27/97:
Talking to a meeting of his Ground Crew: "Whitewash is
just latex paint and water, like Tom Sawyer used."
[Whitewash is a
mixture of slaked lime and water, often with a binder added. Latex
paint wasn’t introduced until 1949, many years after both Aunt Polly’s
picket fence and Tom Sawyer were reduced to humus.]
9/1/01:
Speaking of fences, a caller to his Saturday radio program expressed
concern that boiled linseed oil contained heavy metals and asked what he
could use in its place on his wooden fence. "Dirt Doctor's" answer:
"I normally don't stain or paint a fence."
[Then he must have
been no little surprised and irritated when someone sneaked in and put
that oil stain on his wooden fence. Maybe it was
Phil Callahan's
little leprechauns.]
8/31/97:
"The E. coli problem may go back to 1952, when we genetically
engineered soy beans."
[Really? James Watson
and Francis Crick described the double helix shape of the DNA molecule
in 1953 in a paper published in Nature. Twenty years later,
in the 1970s, genetic engineering was developed, and the first
genetically engineered organism (a bacterium used for cleaning up oil
spills) was patented in 1980. The first genetically modified soy bean
wasn't introduced until 1995, and the seedstock became commercially
available only in 1996, some 44 years after his claimed date. Besides,
what's the connection between soy beans and E. coli, a strain
of bacteria found in the digestive systems of animals?]
9/27/97:
Speaking at a Ground Crew meeting:
"Well, guess what! Lava sand doesn’t contain any iron."
[The Lava Sand
Facts Report from Twin Mountain Rock Company, the chief supplier of
lava sand, lists a 7 percent content of hematite, the most abundant of
all iron ores. And an x-ray diffraction analysis of a small sample
indicated that it had a hematite content of as much as 15 to 20
percent.]
11/14/97:
"Boric acid is acceptable in an organic program because it’s a natural
material, dug right out of the ground."
[No, it isn't. Boric
acid may be acceptable in an organic program, but it's a man-made
chemical obtained either by treating borax, colemanite, or other natural
boron salts with an acid or by the hydrolysis of boron halides or
hydrides. This is fundamentally the same process used to make
superphosphate fertilizers, and they're a no-no in any organic program.]
6/7/02:
"Compost used to make compost tea for the Garrett Juice does not have to
be completely finished. In fact, a decent tea can be made by soaking
the raw materials before they have composted."
[Such a statement is
not only ignorant, it is absolutely irresponsible, considering that he
urges his followers to compost anything and everything that was once
alive, including all sorts of garbage and both human and animal waste.]
1/4/98:
"I really don't understand why so many in the organics world are against
using sewage sludge on edible crops. It's the best fertilizer of all.
Human sewage sludge has been used for thousands and thousands of years."
[And, as a result,
humans have suffered from diarrhea, dysentery, cholera, typhoid fever,
and the ravages of enteroviruses for thousands and thousands of years.]
1/4/98:
Caller's question: "Is raw sewage dangerous to use on
the lawn before the feces break down?" "Dirt Doctor's" answer:
"Really, no."
[The neighbors may not
be too happy with the odor, but it'll sure cut down on fertilizer
costs.]
5/14/00:
"It's fine to put human feces in the compost pile; they're full of
proteins. Besides, the Chinese have been doing that forever, and
there's a gazillion of them. It hasn't killed them off"
[Nevertheless, I don't
think I'll be spraying my vegetables with anything he makes from
his compost tea.]
12/29/00: To
a caller's question about whether or not to put dog excrement in a
compost pile, the "Dirt Doctor" replied, "Mother Nature composts
everything that was once alive and so should we. The best way to
eliminate any dangerous aspects of any waste material is to neutralize
it with the purifying heat from microbial feeding in the compost."
[If human excrement is okay, it would
be a little silly to ban dog poo. But, will he never learn? No heat
achieved in a compost heap will kill viruses. And, obviously, compost
heat doesn't even kill all the bacteria that generate it. In addition,
research at Rutgers University, published in January of 2002, has shown
that bacteria, such as E. coli and Listeria, can be
absorbed by the roots of salad greens and carried up into the plant.
Therefore, washing a crop fertilized with manure or contaminated compost
won't necessarily eliminate the danger of food poisoning. And these are
just a few of the known and well-established dangers of including any
fecies of meat-eating animals in a compost heap.]
5/6/01: On
the other hand, he apparently believes composting can solve all ills.
Discussing with a caller to his Sunday radio program the proposed
disposal of radioactive waste in West Texas, the "Dirt Doctor" said,
"The solution to the problem of burying atomic waste is composting."
[One can only marvel at such
ignorance, both that of the speaker and of the listener who failed to
challenge the statement.]
1/25/04:
"Earthworm castings are a better quality compost . . .
just a good quality compost."
[Which begs the question, does the
"Dirt Doctor" even know what compost is?]
5/14/00:
"Larkspurs are colorful annuals, but they're poisonous. They contain
digitalis."
[It's foxgloves (Digitalis sp.),
not larkspurs, that contain this poison and medical potion.]
1/6/01:
During his radio program, in answer to a caller's question about adding
nitrogen fertilizer to his compost heap, the "Dirt Doctor" replied, "The
biggest source of nitrogen for a compost pile is the air. You don't
have to put a nitrogen source in."
[It's a simple, well known fact that
air is not a source of nitrogen for composting, another process he
obviously doesn't understand.]
2/22/98:
"People are afraid of salts, but that's not right. We all know sodium
is a salt, but magnesium, potassium and nitrogen, for that matter, are
also salts." Then, as late as August 23, 2003, he repeated this
spurious statement."
[He brags that he
never took a chemistry course in college. But, apparently, he didn't
even take high school chemistry. Otherwise, he would know that none of
these are salts. They're all chemical elements. But he apparently
refuses to believe it, as the following also emphasizes.]
6/23/02:
"Orange oil is a salt. D-limonene is a salt."
[Five and a half years
passed between the first and last of these statements, and he's still at
a loss to know what a salt is. D-limonene is a terpene, an unsaturated,
chemically reactive hydrocarbon that can be derived from many vegetable
products, such as orange oil in this case.]
11/01/03:
Furthermore, on his Saturday radio program, he said, "Table salt, which
is calcium chloride, . . . "
[Does this even
deserve a comment?]
1/23/04:
"A reader wote to his newspaper column, "We have well water that is
slightly salty. Does this affect trees and shrubs." The answer was,
"Salty water sprayed on foliage can cause burns. Organic soil
treatments can neutralize the salt problem. Inject compost tea, Garrett
Juice or liquid humate into your irrigation system to eliminate the
burn."
[Chemists are waiting
with bated breath for an explanation of how any of these "treatments"
can "neutralize" sodim chloride (the same thing as common table salt) --
or any other salt, for that matter.]
11/02/03:
On his radio program, the "Dirt Doctor" suggested to a caller,
"According to the Mississippi Delta Extension Service, sodium chloride,
calcium chloride, and sodium chlorate will all control nutgrass. Let's
try potassium bicarbonate, another salt."
[Shoot, as long as
we're trying just any old salt, we might as well try baking soda, epsom
salts, rock phosphate, limestone, dolomite, and gypsum.]
11/10/02:
Speaking of chemistry, a caller on his Sunday radio program was
concerned because his new brick work was washed with muriatic acid. The
"Dirt Doctor" responded, "No problem. That's diluted acid -- sulfuric,
I think -- and won't hurt anything."
[Muriatic acid,
generally sold as a 15 percent solution, is an old name for hydrochloric
acid. By the same token, potassium chloride is often sold as "muriate
of potash."]
2/23/97, 11/22/98 and
8/8/99:
"Native Americans called sulfur ‘brimstone’."
[The word "brimstone"
is derived from an Old Saxon word meaning "burning stone." There’s no
evidence that Saxons ever communicated with Native Americans -- unless
the "Dirt Doctor" has unearthed an old Caddo/Saxon dictionary.]
3/1/98:
"The American Indians used lamb’s ears as an antiseptic bandage."
[Lamb’s ear,
Stachys byzantina, is native to Turkey and the Caucasus, a long and
arduous canoe trip for Native Americans. But maybe they interrupted the
journey with a visit to the Saxons, where they picked up some brimstone
and took a few language lessons.]
6/21/98:
"We're real unusual here (in North Central Texas) with our alkaline
soils. The rest of the country generally has acid soils."
[It's well documented
that the majority of soils west of the Mississippi River are alkaline,
as are soils in most other regions with relatively sparse rainfall.]
6/13/99:
"Arsenic is a trace mineral and is actually good for you at very low
levels."
[Arsenic is not a
mineral. It's one of the toxic chemical elements in the same category
of cumulative poisons as mercury, lead, cadmium, and selenium, none of
which are "good for you" at any level. The EPA has classified arsenic
as a human carcinogen. And the National Academy of Sciences' National
Research Council has cited evidence indicating that arsenic causes high
blood pressure and diabetes.]
4/29/01:
"As far as I'm concerned, the arsenic content (of our drinking water)
should be zero."
[It's possible that he
finally read Rachel Carson's Silent Spring or that he found out
about the EPA studies in the interim between these two statements. But,
more than likely, this is just another example of the "windsock
behavior" his early employers noted -- his predilection to blow with the
wind.]
8/11/02:
His comment to a listener who called in with a question during his
Sunday radio program: "You're the caller that sounds
like Rachel Carson."
[Let's see now.
Rachel Carson died in 1964, when the "Dirt Doctor" was a high school
junior. There's no mention of any voice recordings on the
Rachel Carson
website, so maybe this is another example of the
mystical powers of paramagnetism.]
5/16/99:
"Kodiak is the new non-toxic, pressure-treated wood. I have a fence of
it now."
6/20/99:
"I have a fence of Kodiak, and it's beautiful."
3/19/00:
In reply to a radio listener's question: "There were
some problems with Kodiak, so it's not on the market."
[And that's why you'll
need truly mystical powers to conjure up his fence that never was.]
7/11/99:
"You've heard of 'salt in the wound.' Salt is a good disinfectant.
It's actually good for a wound."
[Obviously, he doesn't
comprehend the meaning of this old bromide. And he's unaware that
aboriginal peoples have, for years untold, rubbed salt into fresh cuts
in order to create raised scars as body decorations.]
10/10/99:
"This (oak wilt) is basically the same disease that hit elm trees
several years ago."
[The "Dirt Doctor"
must have learned that these two diseases are caused by fungi belonging
to the same genus: Ceratocystis fogacearum for
oak wilt and Ceratocystis ulmi for Dutch elm disease. He just
doesn't understand that, otherwise, they aren't related, and the
symptoms, the vectors, and the treatments are completely different.]
9/01/02:
"I believe there are a lot of ways the oak wilt virus can be
transmitted."
[But now, three years
later, it's caused by a virus? It must have mutated.]
10/06/02:
"Oak wilt has a workable cure.....My sick tree
treatment is the cure for oak wilt.
[If you're interested,
this treatment can be found on his website. But the impetus for its
development is in doubt since, once again, he has apparently assumed
that his audience suffers from attention deficit disorder.]
1/17/04:
(Saturday) "I originally designed my sick tree treatment to deal with
the problems of red tip photinias."
1/18/04:
(Sunday) "The sick tree treatment was developed for the most part to
deal with oak wilt."
8/23/03:
And speaking of that treatment, the "Dirt Doctor" told a caller to his
radio program that he could stop cotton root rot by finding some
Actinovate (zeolite laced with a symbiotic bacterium) and using the full
sick tree treatment. He made no mention of reducing the soil pH to an
acidic condition with some form of sulfur, the standard means of dealing
with that fungal disease.
1/2/00:
A caller to Howard Garrett's Sunday radio program related that she had
seen a late-night PBS television program that told how someone had
planted seeds from the original Mayan wheat and, using ancient Mayan
growing techniques, had harvested a bigger crop than we do with modern
seeds and modern growing techniques. The "Dirt Doctor" was duly
impressed with her story.
[It's difficult to
know who is the most ignorant here, PBS (if the caller actually saw what
she described), the caller, or the "Dirt Doctor." The ancient Mayas
never grew wheat. Wheat is native to the Fertile Crescent and the
eastern Mediterranean and was introduced into the Western Hemisphere by
the Spanish and English. And, even if the caller misspoke and meant to
say corn instead of wheat, the premise is still ludicrous. The Mayas
didn't grow corn as we know it today. They grew a maize plant with tiny
little ears, an ancestor far-removed from modern corn.]
[Of course, history
might be wrong. This could be more evidence of the far-ranging travels
of ancient Americans. Maybe the Mayas acquired wheat by going along on
one of those overseas trips for brimstone, lamb's ears, and language
lessons.]
10/18/03:
Speaking of antiquities, on his Saturday radio show, he declared, "We've
exposed the caliper [root flare] of a 1000-year-old pecan tree over in
Weatherford."
[Maybe Mel Brooks'
1000-year-old man planted that tree.]
3/17/00:
Newspaper column question from M.M., Dallas: "What kind
of flowers repel bugs from vegetable gardens?" "Dirt Doctor's" answer:
"The key to companion planting is to use annual and perennial flowers,
vines, shrubs and trees that provide a multitude of flower sizes,
colors, fragrances and times of bloom. The biodiversity encourages a
wide range of beneficial insects and hummingbirds, which control pest
insects and pollinate flowers."
[Excuse me? All in a
vegetable garden? Translation: "I have no idea, but
biodiversity has six syllables."]
3/17/00 and 3/24/00:
Two-minute noontime radio spot: "Here are two pesticide sprays you can
make at home out of animal products: orange oil and
garlic-pepper tea."
[Animal products?
Doesn't he even listen to himself?]
4/13/01:
Newspaper column response to a question regarding blood meal:
"I use very little blood and bone meal. Soft rock phosphate is much
more effective in our soils than bone meal and costs less." (Then he
went on to write that bat guano and corn gluten meal were superior to
blood meal as nitrogen sources.)
[Soft rock phosphate
is essentially the mineral apatite, calcium phosphate. It is chemically
inert and ineffective unless the soil pH is less than an acidic 6.2, but
almost all local soils are alkaline. Plus, most local soils already
contain an excessive amount of both calcium and phosphorous.]
Then, only two months
later the following two items appeared: As you read
them, you'll just have to wonder why the "Dirt Doctor" believes that
rock phosphate can substitute for Sul-Po-Mag (a mineral commonly used as
a source of potassium and magnesium) and for glauconite (greensand), a
potassium iron silicate.
6/22/01:
Newspaper column about growing roses: "In sandy acid
soils use soft rock phosphate (instead of Sul-Po-Mag)."
6/29/01:
Newspaper column about fruit and pecan trees: "(Use)
Texas greensand ... or soft rock phosphate at the same
rate if in acid soils."
[Suddenly, after
several years of touting its value for alkaline soils, he discovered a
truth about rock phosphate! Perhaps he read it here.]
But, between the
appearance of the two previous columns . . .
6/23/01:
Radio comment: "You can plant directly in it (soft rock phosphate), and
the plant will do very well. It's almost a soil in itself."
[Anyone that actually
believes this should give it a try. I did, and I took pictures. Send
me an e-mail request, and I'll show them to you.]
11/9/03:
And on this date, according to Howard, some people are still saying (by
e-mail) that soft rock phosphate isn't any good here. "I have no idea
why," he said.
[Has he conveniently
forgotten that even he has admitted that it's viable only in acidic
soils? Apparently so.]
12/20/03:
To a caller to his radio program who wanted to know what kind of "lime"
to add to increase the pH of his soil, the "Dirt Doctor" replied that a
high calcium "lime" would be best, but he added, "My favorite, because
it buffers and has lots of trace minerals, is soft rock phosphate."
[So, if he believes
that soft rock phosphate raises the soil pH (which it doesn't), why
would he recommend it for use in alkaline soils? And, obviously, he
doesn't know what a buffer does.]
7/22/01:
A caller to his Sunday radio program said that the trunk of his tree had
split vertically down the middle and wanted to know what he could do
about it. In his reply, the "Dirt Doctor" said, "Don't bolt the halves
together like some arborists will advise because tree tissue doesn't
have the ability to heal itself. It will always leave a rotted area
and a weak joint."
[Think about that for
a minute. If it were even remotely true, there wouldn't be any grafting
of trees, would there?]
9/28/02:
On his Saturday call-in radio program, he proclaimed, "Trees will send
feeder roots up to the surface where they'll feed on organic matter and
the other stuff."
[There's nothing like
chomping on a chunk of organic matter and "other stuff" to satisfy a
tree's hunger.]
7/26/02:
J. M., a reader from Canyon Lake, wrote to the "Dirt Doctor's" newspaper
column and asked what to do about the moss-like growths in his oak
trees. "Does the parasite kill the tree?" he asked. "What can we do
for it naturally?" Answer:
"Ball moss is a parasite that only hurts the tree in heavy infestations,
but it can be controlled easily by spraying baking soda or potassium
bicarbonate at 1/2 cup per gallon of water."
[How is it that this
tree expert doesn't know that ball moss (Tillandsia recurvata)
is not a parasite and takes nothing from the tree? It is an epiphyte,
like orchids and like its cousins, the bromeliads. It can, indeed, be
killed by spraying with a strong fungicide -- in the spring when it's
actively growing. But it can also be removed by hand or with a strong
blast of water.]
12/01/02:
Then, on his radio program, he told a caller, "We see Spanish moss, even
ball moss, attacking those plants (trees in stress)."
[Stress has nothing to
do with epiphytic growth, nor do epiphytes attack anything, two more
facts he obviously doesn't understand.]
10/19/03:
A listener to his radio program called in to ask about his dying pine
trees, believing the problem might be caused by pine beetles. Stating
his mantra about stressed plants, the "Dirt Doctor" replied, "If so,
that's a secondary problem. They come in because the trees are in
stress. It's probably moisture. Add lava sand, and add some compost if
you don't already have a lot of pine needles."
[First, lava sand and
compost to ward off pine beetles verges on the inane. Second, stressed
trees and other plants are certainly more prone to damage from pests and
diseases, but this self-proclaimed expert needs to learn that some
pests, including the pine beetle and the beetles that carry oak wilt,
Dutch elm, and rose rosette diseases, attack completely healthy plants
and thereby devastate entire forests and landscapes. But to admit this
would be to admit he doesn't have a clue about a solution to any of
these diseases.
11/02/03:
A listener asked, "Can bark beetles be imported in wood from Mexico?"
The reply was, "No, the life cycle doesn't permit that."
[Strange answer
indeed, since it has been well publicized that bark beetles have been
imported in wood that came all the way from China.]
5/25/03:
A caller to his Sunday radio program asked how beneficial nematodes
mixed into only one gallon of water could be used to treat 2,000 square
feet. The "Dirt Doctor" replied, "A gallon of water, if you don't put
too much out in one spot, will cover 2,000 square feet. If you put it
out real fast, it'll cover 2,000 square feet."
[Well, duh! But, if
you do the math, the man's concern is obvious. One gallon of water
spread over 2,000 square feet would be a layer only 0.0008
inches deep.]
6/06/03:
A newspaper column question from B.S. in Richardson asked, "How can I
lower the pH of my soil? Answer: "Although
adjusting the pH of the soil usually is an unimportant consideration, it
can be lowered by adding Texas greensand, vinegar or sulfur. An organic
program and the resulting healthy soil will cause the pH at the surface
to be just about perfect.
[Where to start on
such a reply? Soil pH is undeniably important with regard to nutrient
availability for the plants, but there is no such thing as a "perfect"
pH. Sulfur will lower pH for several months; and vinegar in the soil
solution will lower pH for a day or two; but there is nothing about
Texas greensand that will have any measurable effect on soil pH.
Finally, "pH at the surface" has absolutely no relationship to the
plants or to the soil. It's just a confirmation of his almost complete
ignorance about the meaning of pH.]
6/13/03:
D.W. of Dallas wrote to the "Dirt Doctor's" newspaper column about his
anti-mosquito device. It sprays a dilute mixture of pyrethrin,
permethrin, and piperonyl butoxide (PBO) for 30 seconds, twice a day.
Referring to "mosquito foggers sold at many stores," he asked, "This
system can't be worse, can it?"
"Yes, it can," was the
reply. The "Dirt Doctor" then went on to say that pyrethrin is a
natural pesticide but is still toxic. He stated that PBO is a
synthetic synergist that has been linked to liver disease in animals.
"But it gets worse," he said. "For some reason, the geniuses who
designed and are selling this system have created an even more toxic and
dangerous effect by adding another synthetic synergist to the mix --
permethrin."
[All of this is
a mix of ignorance, exaggeration and wrong information. According to
the Pesticide Action Network (PAN), an anti-chemical organization,
pyrethrin is a botanical insecticide (extracted from a type of daisy)
and only a possible or potential carcinogen. They state that PBO is a
synthetic synergist that possibly has reproductive effects, but they
make no mention of any liver disease associated with it. And they
describe permethrin, not as a synergist, but as a pyrethroid, a chemical
insecticide that is a manmade version of pyrethrin.]
8/23/03:
To a caller on his radio program, he said, "Vampire bats normally attack
animals that are in stress, that are dying. And they normally attack
around the feet."
[The caller had seen a
PBS program about vampire bats, a program which no doubt refuted
everything the "Dirt Doctor" said. But he said nothing. Of course, he
was also worried about vampire bats being in Texas, having failed to
pick up from PBS that they are tropical animals.]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, April, 1999, page 15: Howard
Garrett continually rails against the use of chemical pesticides and
herbicides, referring to most of them as "neurotoxins." Yet, in his
monthly "ground crew" bulletin, he recommended the use of oxalic acid
for control of moss on a sidewalk. Then he wrote, "It's much
stronger, but once washed off and diluted, it becomes a valuable soil
amendment."
[Commercial oxalic
acid is a man-made chemical product. And, since it consists entirely
of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, it is of no value as a soil amendment.
To the contrary, it can react chemically with and tie up nutrient
cations in the soil. But, more importantly, oxalic acid is, itself, a
known neurotoxin. According to The Penguin Dictionary of Chemistry,
"It (oxalic acid) is poisonous, causing a paralysis of the nervous
system."]
9/26/03:
It becomes apparent that the "Dirt Doctor" doesn't really know the
meaning of "neurotoxin" when one reads what he wrote in his weekly
newspaper column: "The journal says that, in laboratory
tests, insecticides made from pyrethrum have caused tumors in animals,
increased the risk of leukenia, disrupted the normal function of sex
hormones, and triggered allergic reactions including heart attack and
asthma." Not one of these symptoms concerns the human nervous system.
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, May, 1999, page 1: "During the
Civil War more Union soldiers died from food poisoning due to the tinned
meats shipped from the Chicago stockyards than died from enemy fire."
[He must have slept
through that course in American History -- or his ancestors were
carpetbaggers and scalawags. Where else could he get such a story?]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, February, 2003, page 36: "In
fact, when World War II interrupted shipping, most of the 'coffee' in
this country was actually chicory. It's caffeine-free."
[Some of us were alive
and drinking coffee during World War II, so this Dirt Doctor Gem of
Misinformation must have come from that big manure pile at the Chicago
stockyards, the one that poisoned all those tinned meats during the
Civil War.]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, May, 1999, page 1: "Neither
chickens nor cattle are carnivores -- or cannibals."
[He sure hasn't spent
much time around a chicken yard -- or a cow lot for that matter."]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, January, 2000, page 1:
"The US Constitution (was) ratified in 1776."
[Now it's certain he
slept through that history course.]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, April, 2000, page7: "My new
solar greenhouse has a solid roof that slopes at a 22° angle from the
south down to the north. This is the exact angle of the sun at the
winter solstice, the lowest path it travels in the southern sky on
December 22..."
[He must have
slept through more than a history course because the noonday sun in
Dallas never dips below an angle of approximately 34°. (For a complete
explanation and additional commentary regarding the design of his
special "solar greenhouse," see
Howard's Greenhouse.)]
The Dirt Doctor's Dirt,
January 2001, page 2: "If you buy a fresh tomato
in February, the odds are about 100% that it has been imported from
Mexico, just one of the countries to which we export pesticides that are
banned here."
[Apparently, Mrs. Garrett does all the
grocery shopping. Then she peels off all those little labels, so he's
never become aware of greenhouse tomatoes.]
2/18/01:
(Comment about omitting the 'h' in 'herbs.') "It's pronounced 'herbs.'
Only a Limey would say 'erb."
[Honestly?
Is that an honorable
thing to say about these heirlooms
on an hour-long
show? Anyway, according to the American Heritage Dictionary,
the first, preferred pronunciation is 'urb' and the second choice is 'hurb.'
And Paula LaRocque, retired writing coach for his own Dallas Morning
News, has written, "It's an herb or an herbal
(the h- is silent) but a herbicide (the h- is sounded)."]
4/8/01:
"There are no fruit trees native to this area."
[Nonsense. Two
species of mulberry, the eastern persimmon, the Mexican plum, the Munson
plum, and the escarpment black cherry are all native to Dallas County
and to North Central Texas.]
4/27/01:
In his newspaper column, he answered thusly a question about what he
thinks of epsom salts: "Epsom salts is an excellent tool for improving
the production of the soil but only if the soil is deficient in
magnesium and sulfur. That is usually the case in North Central
Texas. The natural Sul-Po-Mag is a better choice."
[To the contrary,
because of the limestone and clay content, the Blackland Prairie soils
of Texas are seldom, if ever, deficient in magnesium or sulfur.]
4/26/02:
One year later, this question appeared in his newspaper column:
"A nursery told us to sprinkle epsom salts around the base of newly
planted crape myrtles. What do you think?"
His reply indicated he
still knows little about local soils: "Epsom salts --
magnesium sulfate -- improve our soils here in North Texas, which are
generally deficient in magnesium and sulfur."
[Local soil tests
invariably show both magnesium and sulfur to be in the "high" range,
unlike the sandy soils of the "Dirt Doctor's" boyhood home in East
Texas.]
10/27/02:
Even so, in reply to a radio caller's question about adding lime to his
East Texas soil, the "Dirt Doctor" said, "Be sure it's the high calcium
lime. You don't want the one with magnesium in it because your soil has
plenty of magnesium."
[The one with
magnesium in it is called dolomite or dolomitic limestone, Howard.]
9/29/02:
On his Sunday call-in radio program, he had said, "Dolomite is the most
common form of lime in the feed stores."
[Dolomite is neither
lime nor limestone. Strictly speaking, dolomite is magnesium carbonate,
a mineral. Dolomitic limestone is calcium magnesium carbonate. Neither
one is appropriate for animal feed or for use in alkaline soils.
Therefore, neither one is commonly found either in local feed stores or
in local garden centers.]
8/18/01:
To another radio caller, the "Dirt Doctor" proclaimed, "(In those sandy,
acid soils of East Texas) you probably have too much magnesium."
[Wrong again! Those
sandy, water-leached soils are invariably deficient in magnesium.]
11/11/01:
"Cockroaches were crawling around 30 million years ago, even before the
giant dinosaurs evolved."
[True, except
dinosaurs disappeared about 60 million years ago, and the newspaper
article he apparently read actually said that cockroaches have been
around for 300 million years.]
11/25/01:
"When you use the organic program, even the peeling (of grapefruit) is
sweet and edible."
[Chacun son gout.
Remember, this is the man who claims to enjoy the taste of juniper
berries.]
11/25/01:
"Crude oil is a pretty good fertilizer if it's diluted to a degree."
[Yeah, to the nth
degree. And what will it be diluted with? Water? Not likely.]
12/21/01:
Newspaper column question from C.F., Dallas: "Why is it
that watering plants, when freezing temperatures are expected, may
improve plant tolerance to cold temperatures?" Answer:
"Plants hurting from any deficiency (such as water) are more susceptible
to additional stresses... etc." (He goes on to say that
healthy plants have less stress damage.)
[This answer is
gibberish and just confirms his claim that he never took a course in
physics, since he seems not to know about what is termed the "latent
heat of fusion." Simply put, when water freezes, it gives up this heat
of fusion (amounting to 1,435 calories/gm-mol, or about 80
calories/cubic centimeter or 1,195 Btu/gallon). In plant cells filled
with water and in a well-watered soil, this released heat helps to
maintain a temperature above that of the adjacent and surrounding air.
Hence, watering plants before a freeze can help to protect them from
subfreezing temperatures.]
12/30/01:
On his radio program, the "Dirt Doctor" disparaged the use of zinc
fertilizers and sprays for pecan trees partly by saying, "Pure zinc is
white. Take a look at zinc fertilizers. They're gray or brown or
black."
[No it isn't, and yes
they are. Why? Because pure zinc isn't white, but zinc oxide is, which
is why it's used as the pigment in white paint. Pure zinc is bluish
gray, at best. Take a look at any galvanized fence post. That
bluish-colored galvanic coating is pure zinc. But pure zinc doesn't
occur in nature. Zinc occurs in the form of a mineral ore, with
sphalerite (zinc sulfide) being the most abundant. And sphalerite,
which may also contain up to 18% iron, is gray or brown or black.
Another zinc ore, smithsonite (zinc carbonate), may also contain iron,
manganese, calcium, and magnesium and is commonly a gray or brown
color.]
1/25/02:
Newspaper column question from M.B., Dallas:
"Is there an organic alternative to spraying picloram for the purpose of
killing several acres of prickly pear cactus?" "Dirt Doctor's"
answer: "Good for you for asking (followed by a
long discourse against picloram). Several ranchers prefer to compost the
cactus and add manure to the pile and leave it until the pear is
starting to rot, then turn the pile a few times. ...
However, building the soil by increasing the organic matter is the
long-term control."
[I take it, that's a
"no."]
2/3/02:
In response to a caller's question, the "Dirt Doctor" declared, "Sweet
autumn clematis dies back to the ground every year."
[Yet, on page 51 of
his book, Howard Garrett's Plants for Texas, he described this
plant as a perennial vine, vigorous and semi-evergreen, and recommended
against pruning it the first year. And, curiously, he repeated the
semi-evergreen part in the February, 2002, issue of The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt.]
2/24/02:
On his call-in radio program, speaking about Malathion®, the "Dirt
Doctor" said, "They tell you it'll take the paint off your car, but it's
safe for you to use. Ugh!"
[There really are
better measures of toxicity. Orange juice and chicken eggs, just to
cite two examples, will take the paint off a car.]
2/24/02:
On that same radio program, he related the tale, "We have a young
woodpecker around our house. He hangs at a real awkward angle on our
bird feeder. He's been coming around several years now."
[A young woodpecker
that's been coming around for several years? Wow! All that lava sand
and paramagnetism around his yard must do wonders for the aging
process.]
4/10/02:
On his two-minute, noonday radio spot the "Dirt Doctor" proclaimed,
"Ginkgo has the reputation of growing only about 2 inches a year, but
mine grows 10 times that fast."
[So the 30-foot ginkgo
on St. Michaels Street in North Dallas must be at least 150 years old
and was, therefore, planted out on the prairie when Dallas was still a
village on the Trinity River, 10 miles distant, and 50 years before
ginkgo trees were rediscovered in China. I find that a bit difficult
to believe.]
5/3/02:
(From his newspaper column) "Seaweed provides trace minerals and
tricontanol [sic] which is a growth stimulator."
[Triacontanol is,
indeed, a growth hormone, but it's found in alfalfa, not seaweed.]
5/22/02:
On his noonday radio spot, he declared once again, "I haven't really
pushed volcanic rock powders for the past several years. But I've
gotten smarter."
[Hello out there, all
you brain-dead listeners. Obviously, you're too stupid to remember that
he's been pushing lava sand and other so-called volcanic rock powders
regularly, if not continuously, since at least January of 1993.]
6/23/02:
To a radio program caller who had planted some acorns he said, "Oaks are
promiscuous, and there's all sorts of pollen in the air. So you don't
know who the mom and dad are."
[Maybe not "dad," but
I'd strongly suspect that "mom" is the tree that dropped the acorns.]
11/02/02:
Explaining to a radio listener that there really wasn't a problem with
the listener's lawn, the "Dirt Doctor" said, "Toadstools are the
fruiting bodies of organic matter that's decaying in the soil."
[Pardon? I thought
toadstools were the fruiting bodies of fungal organisms.]
11/22/02:
Speaking of magic, on his noontime radio spot, the "Dirt Doctor" said
that soil contaminated with lead, chromium, and arsenic could be cleaned
up with an organic program. To accomplish this, he said to, first,
treat with an activated charcoal product and zeolite to tie up the
contaminants. Then, drench the area with Garrett Juice plus orange
oil. This, he said, will stimulate microbial activity, and the microbes
will consume the heavy metals.
[As simple as that
sounds, he failed to explain one key thing: What will
those microbes do with all those heavy metals to remove them from the
premises?]
12/15/02:
"Figs don't produce a flower, but they do have seed."
[Figs do produce a
flower or, better, an inflorescence. It's just that it's turned inside
out and is the fruit in this case. That tiny hole in the end of each
fig is where the insect gets inside to pollinate the flowers.]
1/31/03:
L. H. of Little Elm wrote in to ask, "Will Garrett Juice help break up
the clay soil in my yard?" In his newspaper column, the "Dirt Doctor"
answered, "Yes, Garrett Juice, a mixture of compost tea, vinegar,
molasses and seaweed that you can mix or buy commercially will soften
the soil."
[Interesting. And to
think, this concoction was originally developed for use as an
insecticidal spray. Oh, well, wetting clay is indeed one way to soften
it for awhile.]
6/06/03:
In reply to a question from F.A. of Dallas about how to control early
blight of tomatoes, the "Dirt Doctor" wrote, "Regular spraying of
compost tea, especially if the liquid is aerated, will help. Bubble
air through the ready-to-use tea with an aquarium pump just befor
spraying."
[Evidently, he has
read or been told that aerobic compost tea (made by bubbling air through
the liquid while brewing in order to encourage aerobic bacteria) is the
best. But he doesn't understand what that means. Bubbling air through
the finished tea just before spraying would accomplish nothing.]
5/23/03:
D. M. of Dallas wote to ask, "What iron supplement do you suggest in
place of Ironite, which you apparently do not advocate?" His answer was
"Texas greensand is better than any other iron prodct..."
[This is simply
ignorant. The iron in Texas greensand is mostly in the ferric state,
which simply means it's insoluble and unavailable to plants. For a
complete explanation about Ironite and a discussion of Texas greensand,
travel via this link to the page with
Rock Powders.]
6/29/03:
A caller on his Sunday radio program asked what to do about chiggers. He
said he had been using diatomaceous earth, as the "Dirt Doctor" had
recommended in his earlier books, but it didn't work. The "Dirt Doctor"
didn't remember recommending DE for chiggers and freely admitted, "That
must have been when I didn't know very much."
[Of course, that word
will never get around to most of those who have those books. But it
makes little difference in any case. In his "bug book," published in
1999, he recommends for chiggers a mixture of DE and pyrethrum. And in
The Dirt Doctor's Dirt for July, 2003, he recommends for
chiggers, "Dust natural diatomaceous earth, and apply beneficial
nematodes."]
[Then, in his
newspaper column of August 15, 2003, he answered a question about
whether nematodes controlled chiggers by writing, "The nematodes
certainly help because of the increase in general biological activity in
the soil. I don't know about direct control of chiggers."]
7/06/03:
Speaking of his "bug book," a caller to his radio program said that a
caterpillar had dried up and fallen off a leaf on one of her plants.
The "Dirt Doctor" replied, "This is caused by natural Bt. There's an
illustration of natural Bt near the front of Malcolm's and my bug book."
I have a copy of that
book given to me by Malcolm Beck and autographed by both Malcolm and the
"Dirt Doctor." As far as I know it's the only version published to
date. Yet I find no mention or illustration of any such thing as
"natural Bt" anywhere in it. Of course, that's no surprise. Their
publisher doesn't print fantasy.
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, August, 2001, page 15: The
"Dirt Doctor" (speaking of why he doesn't like drip irrigation systems)
said, "Plus, the water drips onto the soil directly below the drip hole.
Then you're depending on gravity to spread it around."
[There's that lack of
any understanding of physics again. Once the water reaches the soil,
wetting forces and capillary pressure cause it to spread. Gravity
doesn't work horizontally.]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, August, 2001, page 8: A reader
wrote about the safety of using railroad ties in the garden:
"Is there anything out there where scientific tests have been done to
say that vegetable plants uptake arsenic and other bad things from
ties?" "Dirt Doctor's" answer: "I learned
something important in my early days of organic enlightenment. Trying
to offer up 'scientific' proof to people as to whether it's a good idea
or not to use toxins and carcinogens around your food and your family is
a gross waste of time."
[Translation:
"I don't know of any scientific tests, but that doesn't make any
difference to me." On the other hand, aren't railroad ties treated with
creosote, rather than with the copper-chromium-arsenic preservative (CCA)
used for construction and landscape timbers?]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, December 2001, page 17: A
ground crew member's letter stated that the tea tree (Melaleuca
alternifolia) and the sweet gum tree (Liquidamber styraciflua)
are close relatives and gave detailed, laborious instructions for making
the "equivalent of tea tree oil" out of sweet gum leaves "for medicinal
use." The "Dirt Doctor" thanked her for the recipe and added the
comment that there were "plenty" of sweet gum trees "in East Texas and
Oklahoma."
[First, there are also
many, many sweet gum trees right here in the city of Dallas. Second,
and more importantly, this home-brew "medicine" could be dangerous
because the tea tree and the sweet gum are not "close relatives." The
tea tree is a member of the Myrtaceae family, which includes
myrtles, eucalyptus, and cloves; whereas, the sweet gum and witch hazel
are members of the Hamamelidaceae family of trees and shrubs.
Just what is the "Dirt Doctor's" expertise? And what is his liability
if someone uses this concoction and has a bad reaction?]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, February, 2002, page 11: "Zeolite
(Clinoptilotite) is biologically neutral. Like lava sand, it
is 100% natural volcanic material. It contains a wide array of basic
minerals that were spewed back to the earth's surface in a cataclysmic
event--a volcanic eruption."
[Since zeolite,
itself, is a family of individual minerals (clinoptilotite
being just one member of the family), it cannot contain an array of
minerals, basic or otherwise. And no zeolite has ever been spewed out
of a volcano. Zeolite is a secondary mineral resulting from the
chemical alteration of pre-existing rocks. For more details, go see
Rock Powders
at this web site. Or, for a more scientific
description, go to
Zeolites.]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, September, 2002, page 3:
"Methyl bromide is a cheap, effective and highly toxic soil additive."
[Methyl bromide, or
bromomethane, is not a soil additive. It is a poisonous gas that is
used as a soil fumigant.]
The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt, December, 2003: Root knot
nematodes are plant damaging microscopic, un-segmented, parasitic worms.
Some are harmful and some are beneficial."
[One use of methyl
bromide is to get rid of root knot nematodes, all of which are harmful
to plant life.]
And in that same
December edition, he actually wrote, "When pathogens are brought into
their proper proportions they are no longer troublesome. In most cases
they become beneficial at that point."
The Dirt
Doictor's Dirt, June, 2003: In a venomous
editorial about Texas A&M fertilizer recommendations and soil testing
procedures, the "Dirt Doctor" repeated the lie he has stated many times
when he said, "The Texas A&M soil test is one of a kind. No other
testing lab in the country uses this particularly harsh acid extraction
procedure." Then, later on, he says, "How do plant roots extract
nutrients from the soil? They use carbon dioxide and carbonic acid."
And then, finally, he
says, "Another problem with the aggie [sic] test is that it does not
report organic matter."
[It would, of course,
be almost impossible for any one individual to know that the method of
nutrient extractions used by the Texas A&M soil laboratory is used
nowhere else in the country. But, in any case, it's simply not true.
However, a lie told enough times can become a fact -- at least in the
mind of the teller. On the other hand, the statement about how plants
extract nutrients from the soil is just so ignorant and so ludicrous
that it's not worth commenting on. And the statement about Texas A&M
not reporting organic matter is simply untrue.]
11/01/03:
And on the subject of A&M soil tests, a caller to his radio program said
a test had shown his soil to be too high in phosphorous and too low in
nitrogen. The "Dirt Doctor" replied, "They (Texas A&M) always get that
because they use harsh acids that give total amounts in the soil, not
what is available to plants."
[Apparently, he can't
see the contradiction here. How can showing only total amounts result
in a phosphorous level that is too high and a nitrogen level that is too
low?]
Then, he told the
caller, "Don't worry about (your soil) being high in phosphorous. Red
oaks will grow in white limestone, which is very high both in calcium
and phosphorous."
[This, of course, is
establishing an entirely new realm of geology since, up until now,
limestone has, by definition, been composed almost entirely (maybe 95
percent plus) of calcium carbonate.]
Over the past 4 or 5
years, cornmeal seems to have become the "Dirt Doctor's" plat du
jour. And legitimate research has shown that cornmeal does have
some algacidal and fungicidal properties. But, as far back as August
31, 1997, the "Dirt Doctor" was up to his usual vices when he declared,
"Cornmeal will not only kill diseases in the soil, but also viruses up
in the plant." Of course, this is nonsense because there is no known
substance that will kill plant viruses without also destroying the
plant. In fact, in his The Dirt Doctor's Dirt for December,
2003, he said "There is little that can be done to restore the health of
a virus-infected plant."
Again, this is a case
where the "Dirt Doctor" seems to have a difficult time keeping his story
on track. For instance, during his radio program on January 27, 2001, a
caller wanted to know about using cornmeal on botrytis. The "Dirt
Doctor" asked him whether botrytis was a fungus or a bacteria [sic]
because, he explained, cornmeal is effective against fungal diseases but
not bacterial ones.
So he believes
cornmeal will kill viruses but not bacterial diseases. (And shouldn't a
gardening "expert" be aware that botrytis is a commonly encountered
fungus? Many home gardeners certainly are.)
On January 11, 2002,
the "Dirt Doctor" defined cornmeal as "a natural soil amendment that is
used to stimulate beneficial soil biology to control fungal diseases"
(no mention of viruses, however). Then, in the next few weeks in his
newspaper column alone, he recommended cornmeal for a variety of
purposes.
February 1:
"My standard bed preparation -- compost, volcanic sand,
cornmeal and organic fertilizer mixed into native soil."
February 8:
"Apply cornmeal to the soil for fungal disease control."
February 20:
"Cornmeal amendment to the soil is 'critical' for control of the
bacterial grape disease transmitted by sharpshooter bugs." [But, only a
year earlier, he said cornmeal didn't kill bacterial diseases.]
March 8:
"A thin layer of horticultural cornmeal will control spider mites on
indoor plants."
May 23:
"Cornmeal used on the soil around roses is very effective at controlling
fungal diseases. The rate that works best is ... 1 to
2 pounds per 100 square feet. When used at a greater rate, the
biological activity it stimulates can be so heavy that it becomes a
problem rather than a cure."
And in the March,
2002, issue of The Dirt Doctor's Dirt, he wrote, "According to
Researcher Reports, cornmeal is also effective on athlete's foot,
psoriasis, warts and other skin problems."
Then, on his noonday
radio spot on May 15, 2002, he declared, "We haven't run into a fungus
yet that it won't control."
But, according to the
"Dirt Doctor, it's still much more than a fungicide. On his radio show
of November 9, 2003, he declared, "A little cornmeal worked into the
soil will give you indirect control of insect pests."
Then, on his talk show
of November 16, 2003, he told a caller that St. Augustine decline (SAD)
was caused by "some sort of fungus disease" and could be cured by an
apllication of cornmeal.
And, on his radio show
of January 3, 2004, a caller recommended a paste of cornmeal and castor
oil for removing warts and moles. The "Dirt Doctor" thanked him and
called that "a great tip."
[It's getting more
magical all the time. If it gets any better, I may have to create a new
and separate page solely for the miracle workings of cornmeal. On the
other hand, aren't warts caused by a viral infection? St. Augustine
decline certainly is. And some moles are cancerous.]
11/10/02:
A listener to his Sunday radio program called in and said, "Thanks for
telling us about cornmeal. I soaked my fingernail for 30 minutes. The
next day, it was soft, and I just tore it off."
[Somehow, I don't
think that's a proper cure for nail fungus.]
1/10/04:
And it gets even better. He told a listener, "to get rid of powdery
mildew on the foliage, cornmeal juice is the best spray of all."
[It would be
interesting to know who tested this remedy and when it was tested. And
how "cornmeal juice" was compared to all the other fungicides available
to the organic gardener.]
9/19/03:
R.W. of Dallas wrote and asked what to do about a grape pest infestation
he described as something similar to a small aphid that forms galls on
the leaves and starves the plant. The "Dirt Doctor" replied, "Use
horticultural cornmeal on the soil, cedar mulch on top of that, foliar
feed with aerated conpost tea and use my entire organic program."
[Cornmeal, cedar mulch
on the soil and foliar feeding to rid plants of aphid-like insects? Oh,
well, they aren't his vines.]
12/15/02:
At the same time, he promotes corn gluten meal as a pre-emergent. But
it's obvious he doesn't undertand how it works, when he says, "Corn
gluten meal won't stop all the seeds from germinating, but it will hurt
the germination."
[Corn gluten meal
doesn't stop any seed from germinating. It has a high concentration of
nitrogen that encourages topgrowth of seedlings, while inhibiting the
development of a root system, according to Iowa State University. Tests
have shown that it is about 50 percent effective in killing newly
sprouted weed seedlings in lawns. As the chief promoter of this
product, the "Dirt Doctor" should know that.]
2/2/03:
"Don't fertilize until June if you use corn gluten meal now."
[Corn gluten meal has
an N-P-K of 9-0-0, so it has no phosphorous or potassium and few
micronutrients. It is not a complete fertilizer by any stretch of the
imagination or wave of the magic wand.]
11/01/03:
"If you only lightly water corn gluten meal, you can set up an anaerobic
reaction, and it really smells bad."
[Apparently, he
doesn't even understand that an anaerobic reaction is one that occurs
without any oxygen being present, with only anaerobic bacteria being
active, or both.]
In The Dirt
Doctor's Dirt for October, 2003, Howard Garrett demonstrated one of
the means he uses to defend his position without having to present any
real evidence. He quoted Dr. Mike Merchant of the Texas Cooperative
Extension as saying, "Don't be misled by sales claims for many so-called
'natural' products. Advertising which claims that any insecticide is
'safe,' 'pure,' 'all natural,' 'EPA approved,' 'pesticide free' and
'chemical free' are [sic] at best misleading; and at worst, false or
illegal. Many people get great saisfaction from using only substances
found in nature in their garden. This is generally a good thing.
However, use of synthetic pesticides can also be a safe and
environmentally sound practice if practiced with care and discretion."
The "Dirt Doctor"
argued with the last sentence of this statement, as expected, but then
he went on to write, "It's amusing that these artificial experts can
with a straight face say that cornmeal, baking soda, pepper, garlic,
cedar and other plant oils can be dangerous."
[Of course, nowhere in
his statement did Dr. Merchant (an actual Ph.D. and one whom the "Dirt
Doctor" has called a "little weasel") say that any of these particular
products is dangerous, although one can suppose that consuming any of
them in sufficient quantity might be less than intelligent.]
Another of the "Dirt
Doctor's" favorite ploys is to dream up and contribute ignorant
statements to the scientific community. For instance, he has declared
on many occasions, "One of the lies told by the organiphobes is that
plants can only absorb nutrients in the elemental (ion) form."
Where in the world is
he hiding these lying organiphobes? Every educated botanist and
horticulturist knows otherwise. Certainly, every purveyor of systemic
pesticides is aware that plants can absorb complex molecules of many
types.
In the same vein,
during his two-minute, noontime radio spot on September 17, 1999, the
"Doctor of Dirt" said, "Now is the time the organiphobes are telling
everyone to spray all the peach trees with Bordeaux mixture for the
disease called peach leaf curl." Then, in the October, 2000, issue of
The Dirt Doctor's Dirt, he adopted this same organiphobe
approach when he wrote that, for peach leaf curl, October is the time to
"spray Garrett Juice with 1 tablespoon of potassium bicarbonate or
baking soda per gallon of water."
But these organiphobes
exist only in his imagination. No one with any actual knowledge
recommends spraying in North Texas in late summer or early fall for
peach leaf curl. Westcott's Plant Disease Handbook says it
was discovered more than 100 years ago that this fungal disease can be
prevented only by spraying peach trees after leaf fall in autumn or
early in the year before the buds begin to swell. And the National
Gardening Association recommends spraying "once all the leaves have
fallen." Besides, why is there a problem? Bordeaux mixture is an
approved product for certified organic gardeners.
Sometimes, though, the "Dirt Doctor" does get it almost right. On
November 22, 1998, in response to a question about what happens to the
sodium when an organic program is applied to a tract that has been
watered with salty water, he said, "Biological transmutations is really
what’s going on, even though science doesn’t recognize that such a thing
is really possible."
If you
check out this claim, you'll find that the last clause is indeed true.
Science doesn't recognize "biological transmutations." But that's
okay. Science doesn't recognize alchemy, but that doesn't stop some
people from trying to turn lead into gold. And some people still
believe (or want to believe) in a hollow earth, that quartz crystals
have magical powers, or that the moon is made of green cheese. And some
will still accept, without question, any pronouncement made by the
"Doctor of Dirt."
Why is
this? One answer probably lies in the words of Steve Comisar, a famous
and successful con artist (known also as Brett Champion) who said to
Mike Wallace, during an interview on 60 Minutes, "We're all
dreamers, and we con men deliver that dream to you."
Or maybe the "Dirt Doctor" just recognizes a truism credited to the
Doobie Brothers:
"What a fool believes he sees, no
wise man has the power to reason away."
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