I'm not saying you can't do wonderfully with hydro. But it is way more simple to have a good organic soil and for the most part have to do nothing other than water when it is needed. These were fed nothing but water and some honey until they were in flower. Then just big bloom, epsom salt, silica and honey every other wateringI completely disagree that soil is easier than hydro. What could be easier than "10ml per litre"?
As long as you follow the directions, a simple recirculating or bubbling hydroponic kit will:
* Grow faster and better
* Eliminate overwatering or underwatering
* Reduce or eliminate problems with soil-borne pests
* Provide the correct nutrient ratios ALL THE TIME without having to second-guess what's in the soil
* Reduce waste
The two biggest problems I see with noobs in soil are: overwatering, overdosing nutrient
They simply can't help themselves. The number of plants I've seen killed due to damp-off, overwatering or excessive nutrient is mind-boggling.
Hydro is easy as piss. You simply add the nutrient, adjust your pH, and ensure you change your nutrient solution regularly. Make sure you get a quality single part or two-part nutrient and that's really all you need to grow.
Feel free to disagree, but after 35 years of growing, I never use soil. Not even for outdoor grows. I just pot up some coco and water it regularly. The first time I switched from soil to hydro, it was truly a revelation! I will never go back.
Darn tootin'! LolHaving played with wet sets, hydro, aero, wicking and flow for years. I am convinced that soil is easier. Hydro guys forget cleaning of lines, filters, tanks pumps, stones, tables and the timers and constant glitches in electric components and valving flow rates. I make soil. water until flower. Mix correct PPM of "1" part water soluble and feed. No ph needed. Add a Tsp of molasses every third feeding in flower. How is that more difficult? And my soil grows are denser and no chemical after taste. Organics are the preferred method here.
And let's not forget, power outages........ heck those can be scary. No electricity, no bubbles, no oxygen . Eeeaaak! I've had that happen.Having played with wet sets, hydro, aero, wicking and flow for years. I am convinced that soil is easier. Hydro guys forget cleaning of lines, filters, tanks pumps, stones, tables and the timers and constant glitches in electric components and valving flow rates. I make soil. water until flower. Mix correct PPM of "1" part water soluble and feed. No ph needed. Add a Tsp of molasses every third feeding in flower. How is that more difficult? And my soil grows are denser and no chemical after taste. Organics are the preferred method here.
Thank God for battery powered minnow bucket bublers!And let's not forget, power outages........ heck those can be scary. No electricity, no bubbles, no oxygen . Eeeaaak! I've had that happen.
I got 6 lead acid back up power supplies from back in the day. Good riddance to all the complications and emergencies.And let's not forget, power outages........ heck those can be scary. No electricity, no bubbles, no oxygen . Week! I've had that happen.
Frosty. Grow how ever works for you. Just my opinion. Old, broken and finally accepting I need to simplify things in life. And it is simple now. Honest best to all. Just wish I could get more people on board the green bus.Coco is easiest for me and what I start all my friends on. No chem taste here all terps
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MICHI-CAN, it seems maybe, you are the only person I've seen spend enough time with your plants to have assimilated their color. What the heck?
That's my wife. LOL. She said I would have two green thumbs if they weren't stained brown from picking my butt. And she is green with envy. My girls get more attention than her.MICHI-CAN, it seems maybe, you are the only person I've seen spend enough time with your plants to have assimilated their color. What the heck?
Actual science from the university of Ohio has proven epsoms salt to be virtually useless in soil. Only effective as a foliar spray. Just adding salts to your soil. Asking for problems.I personally grow in coco with a drip system on a timer under LED lights, but I can totally appreciate suggesting a 315cmh in a 3x3 soil grow for noobs. The reality is there is less setup and less investment, and it's easy enough to switch over to hydro in future runs. It's kind of nice having something really basic for your first grow to compare to later once the grow gets a bit more complex. I've never had to add any epsom salts, silica, or honey to my nute mix in soil grows; a decent one-part will work fine.
Article does not say good or bad. I'll look for the paper I read. Better written and detailed explanations. TY.Miracle, myth or marketing? Epsom Salts: Washington State University
Linda Chalker-Scott | Washington State University
Horticultural Myths Looking for the newest myth-information? Check out our blog The Garden Professors. You’ll find science-based information from four horticultural professors from around the country. Fertilizers The Myth of Beneficial Bone Meal (pdf) The Myth of Vitamin Shots (pdf) The Myth of...puyallup.wsu.edu
e function actived...faster mode
paz
Saludos
OOPs. Google gave me a different article the first time. Reading this now. Same article. Just the previous page.Article does not say good or bad. I'll look for the paper I read. Better written and detailed explanations. TY.
I 1000000% agree with this whole heartly!I completely disagree that soil is easier than hydro. What could be easier than "10ml per litre"?
As long as you follow the directions, a simple recirculating or bubbling hydroponic kit will:
* Grow faster and better
* Eliminate overwatering or underwatering
* Reduce or eliminate problems with soil-borne pests
* Provide the correct nutrient ratios ALL THE TIME without having to second-guess what's in the soil
* Reduce waste
The two biggest problems I see with noobs in soil are: overwatering, overdosing nutrient
They simply can't help themselves. The number of plants I've seen killed due to damp-off, overwatering or excessive nutrient is mind-boggling.
Hydro is easy as piss. You simply add the nutrient, adjust your pH, and ensure you change your nutrient solution regularly. Make sure you get a quality single part or two-part nutrient and that's really all you need to grow.
Feel free to disagree, but after 35 years of growing, I never use soil. Not even for outdoor grows. I just pot up some coco and water it regularly. The first time I switched from soil to hydro, it was truly a revelation! I will never go back.