baking powder for ph up

GrowerCy

Active Member
hello

can i use baking powder insteadnof baking soda to ph up my water? i tested it with strips and its raising the ph aswell but im wondering if it will have a negative effect on my plants
 

GrowerCy

Active Member
yes im growing in light mix biobizz...my tap water is 5.75- 5.90..

I will get a ph up in couple of days but i was wondering what i can use now.

is it real that organic soils buffer the ph ? I dint din any def 42 days now ..And im frowing autos
 

gwheels

Well-Known Member
baking soda would work. It is available everywhere (and the shit cleans drains really good when used with vinegar). I have boxes of the stuff.
 

Bugeye

Well-Known Member
It is more or less a waste of time to ph water being used in a soil grow as the soil will very quickly buffer the water ph to whatever the soil ph level is. Depends a little on how high your ppm is in your water as to how much it can change your soil ph over time. Low ppm water will pretty much not change your soil ph at all and high ppm may change it very very slowly over the course of many grows. Hydro is a different story! Cheers!
 

drsaltzman

Well-Known Member
It's not easy to raise your soil PH. Takes a while. There's no quick fix.
But PHing your water is never a bad idea. Thirsty plants drink quick.
Doesn't sound like you have any problems though. I wouldn't add baking powder.
It will collect in the soil (sodium) and get it out of whack.
 

Bugeye

Well-Known Member
It's not easy to raise your soil PH. Takes a while. There's no quick fix.
But PHing your water is never a bad idea. Thirsty plants drink quick.
Doesn't sound like you have any problems though. I wouldn't add baking powder.
It will collect in the soil (sodium) and get it out of whack.
You make an interesting point. I would counter by asking why a ph swing from 6.0 to 7.0 would not be beneficial? A thirsty plant will be taking in the whole time the ph is moving so you’ll cover a broader nutrient uptake range. Or so my thought process goes, I could be wrong. I’m a rainwater guy and haven’t checked ph in years.:bigjoint:
 
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