MustangStudFarm
Well-Known Member
I have been buying peat from Lowes, HomeDepot, and Wal-Mart...
Here we go, someone getting offended... Did I explain that I am on the quest for knowledge and not here just to look cool. If I am ever wrong, I will not try to hide it or cry. If someone can prove me wrong, do it. Maybe I will learn something... Just don't get your feelings hurt.New science? New test? Accounts for "lock out"?
Could you provide a link that vindicates these claims? I can't find anything that supports such on their website...
While there are discrepancies between various testing methods, soil science/chemistry is pretty much set as far as how testing for available nutrient ions goes. There are only three phases to soil chemistry... the soil solution, the soil solid phase, and the gaseous phase. Soil tests reflect either what's contained on the soil colloid (CEC), or what's carried in the soil solution. What's carried in the soil solution has the most impact on how effectively plant roots adsorb nutrients in potted containers.
Get your water tested. That's what I wanted to tell you before you made hastily assumed presumptions about the help I was trying to provide over at GC several months ago.
Prove it... Or, am I the only one that has to site my sources on this forum???While there are discrepancies between various testing methods, soil science/chemistry is pretty much set as far as how testing for available nutrient ions goes.
I guess that you forgot that I shown you a water test report over at GC???Get your water tested. That's what I wanted to tell you before you made hastily assumed presumptions about the help I was trying to provide over at GC several months ago.
I can handle an answer like that!!!It's the way I was taught back in 1972. No reason was given then, just "add a big shovelful of the bark fines", while pointing at the bag. It has been a part of my mix ever since.
I did leave it out ... once ... on the advice of an internet "expert" and that particular batch was a disaster. I guess the old guy who taught me knew what he was talking about and the "expert" was full of shit. It was never omitted again.
That was all the reason I've ever needed.
Wet
The peat that I had tested, I didn't wash it at all! I just want to point that out because I make newb mistakes all the time... Also, my wife has some saponin nuts on hand. She was making homemade laundry detergent and it is very cheap to buy the whole nut and not the liquid mixture. You gotta tell me what Ivory liquid is...It is fully saturated at the end using hot tap water and either Ivory liquid or aloe juice, whichever is closest to hand.
OK, your right... Where else would high sodium come from, kelp?I see coir mentioned AFA high sodium, but nothing about peat, other than the "Spagnum peat moss outperformed coir" blip from Utah State U in the last paragraph.
This is very close to what I used, but I didn't use any compost. How am I higher in sodium and he is lower in all of his Micro nutrients? I thought that compost was for the micros? What problems would occur if more kelp was used, sodium? When I mixed my soil, I used very little fish meal and replaced it with extra kelp. However, I was still low on micros... This is where the Melich 3 test would prove useful, it would tell me if the micros are there and just "Locked Out". The creator of the soil savvy test strongly suggested using the two tests together and I am really thinking about doing it...No sign of burnage really. I like the idea of adding some slower releasing stuff to the mix though.
Currently my mix includes
Basalt
Gypsum
Oyster shell flour
Alfalfa meal
Kelp meal
Neem meal
FRESH local EWC
local compost
Malted Barley Powder
Cut with peat and perlite.
IDK, could be except kelp meal is not used in high amounts.OK, your right... Where else would high sodium come from, kelp?
I cut back on manure because I keep getting high P #'s. The OP used manure in his mix but I used extra kelp on mine, that is the biggest difference that I can see... I probably did use kelp in high amounts.IDK, could be except kelp meal is not used in high amounts.
Most likely manure's and compost. Both are very high in sodium, especially manure. I still use manure (Black Kow), but much less than I used to for this very reason.
Wet
The problem with using high amounts of kelp, I didn't get the micros that I was looking for. I just answer my own question then about using more kelp, I already did it... The biggest micro that I am missing is Mn and that is supposed to be in the "Composted pine firs", so hopefully I will be able to give it a rest soon!
I have grown irritable from my on-going problems... I like to think that adversity builds character, but that character can't give up and has to keep learning.
Dude. My apologies.Prove it... Or, am I the only one that has to site my sources on this forum???
I have been using oak leaves, grass clippings, and rabbit bedding. I have been using a mix or straw and alfalfa hay for the bedding and it is usually urine soaked and full of feed pellets and turds.Mustang,
While I’m not sure if my low available micros is due to lockout or just a lack there of, one thing I can assume is that composts can have very different nutrient breakdowns based on inputs, environment, age etc. I bought my compost from a local farm so I have no way of knowing 100% what is in it.
What type of compost did you use in your mix?
It's cool... My feelings are aside on this issue... My thoughts are that every person is going to have different issues from environmental differences. I tested the ground soil here and it is very high in P. Therefore, my high P might be coming from the leaves and grass that I use in my compost???Dude. My apologies.
I'm helping several growers with water quality issues, and got you tangled up in the mix. You did offer up a water analysis over at GC, and sodium wasn't the issue. It's the bicarbonate content.
I can't offer a linked source as far as soil chemistry and testing methods are concerned. I read collegiate texts concerning the subject....
https://www.amazon.com/Soil-Chemistry-3rd-Hinrich-Bohn/dp/0471363391
You may find this paper helpful. It deals with greenhouse growing (more applicable to indoor growing in potted containers than outdoors in the ground), and addresses the negative impact that alkaline irrigation water has on efficient plant nutrient adsorption. Keep in mind that greenhouse production of ornamental plants doesn't correlate to what we do indoors, considering the time frame necessary to produce said ornamentals vs. 3-5+ months to finish cannabis indoors. Greenhouse production is "turn-n-burn". We're in it for a rather long haul. Considering the watering methods generally utilized by those growing in organic soils (keeping the soil moist as opposed to watering to drain), AND the extended growing times necessary to accomplish such, the bicarbonates present in your water will begin to build up to levels (because they're not being flushed/leached from the soil) that drive pH up and begin to interfere with proper nutrient absorption. Your outdoor plants aren't affected as much or at all because the excessive bicarbonates are leached from the rhizosphere with repeated irrigation. Compare your bicarbonate levels to the upper limit levels suggested in the publication. You're adding "liquid lime" every time you water.
Hope this helps clear things up for you.
Ok, I really haven't researched the water test... To be honest, I have been keeping up more with what the OKC Thunder are doing this off-season. What a drama show!!!It's your bicarbonate content.