Ozone good for plants?
if you had a greenhouse and you flooded the greenhouse with ozone gas (during hours when no one was in the greenhouse obviously) do you think the plants would thrive or be damaged by this? most likely you would have to experiement with different levels to find the optimum ozone saturation level that is good for hte plants, ie not too much, not too little. but since plants need oxygen, wouldn't flooding the atmosphere like this be good for the plants?
also what about this. attaching a hard tube or pipe to your ozonator, then sticking that tube or pipe directly into the ground, at least a foot or two, near the roots of the plants in your garden, then turning on the machine and directly ozonating the soil. do you think that would be beneficial for the plants? or perhaps that would be too much? my concnern in this scenario would be that some soil bacteria are anaerobic and would possibl die off during the ozonating process.
anyway, i don't have a garden (live in an apt) or a greenhouse to test these things, but i have been thinkiing about it since i read "paramagnetism, rediscovering nature's secret force" by philip calahan. in the book he described how adding volcanic rock to soil can be beneficial because the volcanic rock is high in paramagntic force. he also says that oxygen is highly paramagnetic, and plants needs the paramagnetic force to grow.
any thoughts or theories are appreciated, thanks.