HELP ROLLITUP!

Dabbinblunted

Well-Known Member
That plant is way malnurished.
It's hard to burn stuff with maxsea . Sometimes you have to hit them twice at full dose .
You grow weed before ? :mrgreen:
More food then! I guess they arnt liking last year's dirt :cry: only thing I added was earthworm castings, marine cuisine, and some used indoor soil I got for free. I have also only fed maxsea three times and lightly at that..:shock:
 

MeJuana

Well-Known Member
You shouldn't be adding items with differing pH on a regularly basis because it will cause pH hot spots. Unfortunately by your description of soil used, need more info, it just as easily could be pushing things out. It depends how much of what you've put on your soil. If I suspect I've gone too far I hard buffer, it means raise pH to 10 then back down to 7 so you have a lot of material holding that pH. Then I mix in my nutrients and I balance it again (to whatever my tap water is for outside, yes I use high pH water for outside plants). But it's more important it's always the same.

So did you get what I'm saying? Pick a schedule of stuff to feed her and stick to it she will pull right out. If she's in a planter you can also push enough nutrient solution through your soil you basically even out all the nutrients in the planter, of course salt buildup is still a problem so in this case we want to be careful just how much pushing+strength we are doing. As always it's easy to use more later but you can never use less after the fact.

Lastly organics and chem salts don't play well together. You can get Botanicare zho beneficial bacteria that work in both realms but nothing beats picking a direction.
 

Dabbinblunted

Well-Known Member
I hit them each with 5 to 6 gallons of maxsea (1 tablespoon per gallon) and epsom salt (1 teaspoon a gallon) this morning.
 
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