This cheap product from the store will save your garden from all diseases

17.02.2025 11:10

In 2019, a sensation broke out on the forum “Gardening without Borders”: a user with the nickname “Diamond Fairy” said that she cured late blight on tomatoes in three days, spending only 15 rubles.

The recipe turned out to be ridiculously simple - pharmaceutical green paint.

At first, they didn’t believe her, but after a month, hundreds of summer residents confirmed: a solution of brilliant green (20 drops per 10 liters of water) not only kills fungi, but also accelerates the ripening of fruits.

Scientists from the Krakow Agricultural University conducted an experiment: pepper plants treated with brilliant green produced 30% more yield than the control group.

"An antiseptic works as a catalyst for cellular respiration," explains biochemist Anna Gurskaya. "It does not kill pathogens, but creates an environment where they cannot reproduce."

tomato
Photo: © TUT NEWS

But that's not all. Green stuff saves from powdery mildew on cucumbers, rot on strawberries, and even repels the Colorado potato beetle. Petr from Voronezh shared a life hack:

“I coat the cuts on the grapes with undiluted brilliant green - the wounds heal within a day, and the berries don’t rot.”

And Maria from the Moscow region adds 5 drops to a watering can when watering seedlings:

“Before, the sprouts would fall from black leg, now they stand like little soldiers!”

Why are pesticide manufacturers silent about this? The answer is in the archives. In the 1950s, Soviet collective farms used brilliant green on a massive scale to treat grain, but after the advent of chemicals, the method was declared "obsolete."

Today, a bottle costs less than a cup of coffee, and the effect is superior to expensive drugs.

“I no longer buy Topaz or Fitosporin,” admits blogger and agronomist Zoya Sadovaya. “Zelenka + potassium permanganate = a universal shield against 90% of diseases.”

Try it - and your beds will shine with emerald health. After all, sometimes salvation is hidden not in high technology, but in a banal first aid kit.

Author: Valeria Kisternaya Editor of Internet resources