How could music affect plant growth if plants don’t have ears?

Date: 5 March, 2018   |   Category: Uncategorized / VisVibeBaby App /

This subject was one that really brought out the curious mind in me!! When you are reading this blog article, please keep in mind the ability that the VisVibeBaby App has..Particularly the DEVELOPMENTAL SESSION. (This is the same philosophy that even sparked the idea to create an app so powerful) . To start off, Sound is transmitted in the form of waves that travel through a medium, such as air or water. The waves cause the particles in this medium to vibrate. When you switch on your radio, the sound waves create vibrations in the air that cause your ear drum to vibrate. This pressure energy is converted into electrical energy for the brain to translate into what you understand as musical sounds.

In a similar manner, the pressure from sound waves create vibrations that could be picked up by plants, yes PLANTS! Plants would not “hear” the music, they would feel the vibrations of the sound wave.

Protoplasm, the translucent living matter of which all animals and plant cells are composed, is in a state of perpetual movement. The vibrations picked up by the plant might speed up the protoplasmic movement in the cells. This stimulation then could affect the system and improve performance, such as the manufacture of nutrients that develop a stronger and better plant.

Different forms of music have different sound wave frequencies and varying degrees of pressure and vibration. Louder music, like rock, features greater pressure, which some people think might have a detrimental effect on plants. Imagine the effect of strong wind on a plant compared to a mild breeze.

Paradiso di Frassina in Tuscany, Italy, uses classical music to get better production from its vineyards. They observed that plants mature faster when exposed to the soothing sounds of Mozart, Vivaldi, Haydn, and Mahler when compared to a controlled site. MIND BLOWN RIGHT?

This project to wire the vineyard for musical sound started in 2001 as an attempt to keep pests away. However, when they saw better and improved plants and fruits, the project continued as a ‘productivity tool’.

Just like DeMorgenzon wine estate, the music is played non-stop 24 hours a day with no negative results.

They found that sounds at specific frequencies – 125Hz and 250Hz – made genes rbcS and Ald more active, whereas sound waves at 50HZ made their less active….
So to sum up my point of this post… PLANTS #GROW #FASTER AND #BETTER WHEN #STIMULATED BY MUSIC! Imagine the effect it has on your babies, toddlers and YOU! 🎶 #frequency #vibrate #528hz #universallanguage #VisVibeBaby #Developmental #mozart #energy

Blog information found at dengarden.com