gaia green and coco? how?

Jjgrow420

Well-Known Member
I use a self built soil that is made up of one part coco, one part perlite, and one part aged Amish amended compost. Each part being 3 gallons. I blend in one and half cups kelp meal, one cup garden lime, one and a half cups garden tone, about four cups of glacial rock dust I water and let cook. I also add recharge to the soil. I don’t add my worm castings till I start top dressing at four weeks. when I water I only use silica and some cal mag occasionally not all the time with the ca. I use some liquid fish fertilizer sometimes if problems arise but the coco soil perlite mix works well but you have to keep in mind how absorbent the coco is so I use that perlite with basically the same ratio.
Does it have to be amish
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
Does it have to be amish
I think Amish people actually probably grow some bomb ass shit.
Your missing the point,yes coco with salts is easy to get a good crop we all know that even BK can do it :p
Its going organic to make it less work etc... no runoff or ph to deal with.Aka water only.
Preach brother. Gonna give my plants some plain H2O tonight, but I'm being lazy. lol. Organics does have a higher learning curve for sure. I still don't have it all figured out.
 

kronnikk

Member
I have never seen a successful grow using mr. canuck's method.
There is an Official Gaia Green Method thread in the organics section.
None of the contributors use just coco.......it's either soil or peat moss.
You're a literal m0r0n. "I haven't seen it, so it can't be done" You inbred f@$kt@rd lmmfao
 

calvin.m16

Well-Known Member
Look up cannabis growing books like the one by Ed Rosenthal or even they have free "grow bibles" like the one Athena offers.
Slow release "dry amendments" aren't that great for indoor cultivation due to the slow breakdown..
 

buckaclark

Well-Known Member
Look up cannabis growing books like the one by Ed Rosenthal or even they have free "grow bibles" like the one Athena offers.
Slow release "dry amendments" aren't that great for indoor cultivation due to the slow breakdown..
Unless you perfect the timing
 
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