To flush or not to flush?

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
What if there was one thing you could do right before you harvest, and no matter the strain, medium or nutrients you were using, this one thing would greatly increase the quality and size of your yields?

Sounds like a magic trick, right?

But it turns out that there is such a trick like this.

In today’s article, we’re going to discuss flushing, including:

What flushing is
Why you should flush
When to flush
How to flush to maximize your results
If you’re not flushing already, then before you harvest you need to read this guide.

If you’re already flushing before harvest, then keep reading because you’re sure to pick up a few techniques, tips and strategies that can really maximize your results!

Plus, if you’re flushing incorrectly, you could be starving your plants. So let’s get into it.

What Is Flushing?
Flushing is the process right before you harvest of trying to flush out all the excess salts, nutrients and other contaminants that build up in your plants.

The way that most growers flush their plants is by giving them plain water with no nutrients for a set period of time.

By watering like usual but with no nutrients, it works to wash out the excess buildup.

However, there is a downside to flushing like this that we’ll get into in a moment — and for this reason, you may want to think twice before flushing your plants with plain water.

But before we talk about that, let’s discuss…

Why You Should Flush Before Harvest
Flushing is a free and easy way to increase the quality of your final harvest. Here’s why: The same process plants use to grow — absorbing compounds from nutrients, water and the atmosphere — causes them to build up excess salts and other harsh compounds.

If you don’t flush out these excesses before harvest, you could compromise the final quality of your crops.

Here are just a few of the reported benefits of flushing your plants:

Can improve the smoothness of the final product and reduce harshness
Can help remove any chemical tastes from the final product
Increased terpenoid production from the slight stress of no nutrients
Increased final bud swell during the final days before harvest
By getting rid of excess nutrients left over from the growing process, you improve the smoothness of the final product.

And the smell and taste of your harvest can also be improved.

It’s also important to note that you can see an increase in both bud size and terpenoid production after the flush, because your plants have more energy to devote to swelling buds and terpene production. They’re not having to spend energy to intake the nutrients you’re normally feeding them.

So the bottom line is that most growers flush to improve the potency, taste, aroma, size and overall quality of their final harvest.

Who Should Flush? Should All Growers Flush Before Harvest?
The good news about flushing is that it’s a trick that works, no matter what type of grower you are and no matter what type of strains you’re growing.

For example, if you’re an outdoor grower using any type of soil as your growing medium, flushing will deliver the same benefits to your crops.

Likewise, if you’re growing indoors and you’re using coco coir, perlite, or other growing mediums along with hydroponics, you can still flush and improve the quality of your harvests.

The main difference is that depending on how you’re growing, you have to adjust how long your flush lasts. Here are some quick guidelines:

Soil growers should flush the longest, at 1–2 weeks.
Coco coir growers should flush for a shorter time, around one week or less (watch to make sure your plant doesn’t turn too yellow too fast, because coco does not hold on to as much extra nutrients).
Deep water culture (DWC) and other hydroponics growers should flush the shortest time, only 1–2 days, because you’re immediately cutting the plants off from nutrients.
When Should You Flush?
You should wait until you think you’re ready to harvest your plants, and then start your flush.

If you flush your plants too early, you can reduce yields and potency. You’ll be starving them of the nutrients they need, right when they need it.

So how do you know when it’s time to harvest your plants?

The best way to see if your plants are ripe and ready for harvest is to look at their glandular stalked trichomes (a.k.a their resin glands) using a magnifying glass. These trichomes look like crystals or frost on well-cultivated buds.

Trichomes change color as they ripen. They start clear, then turn translucent (or milky white) and finally they turn an amber color. You’ll have best results when roughly 50 percent of the trichomes on your plant have turned a milky-white, translucent color. It’s then that most strains are at peak ripeness.

If in doubt? Just wait a little longer.

In short, it’s better to wait a little longer than to flush too early, because you don’t want to reduce your yields in any way.

WARNING: Flushing With Plain Water Can Cost You Yields!
There’s a big problem with flushing with plain water that you might have thought of already.

The point of the flush is to remove any extra and excess contaminants that you don’t want in the final product. And when you flush with plain water, you really are only relying on the water and essentially washing the plant, root system, and growing medium to remove those excesses.

When flushing with plain water, essentially you’re starving your plants of nutrients right before harvest, which can rob you of the last-minute vigorous floral growth and resin production you crave.

So there’s a better way to make sure those excess contaminants are drawn out of your plants, and do it in a way that doesn’t starve your plants in the process.

How To Flush For Maximum Results
Instead of flushing with plain water, which starves your plants and reduces floral growth and resin, you need Flawless Finish.

How To Flush For Maximum Results with Advanced Nutrients Flawless Finish

It uses a broad range of empty chelates — which are like tiny, powerful vacuum cleaners — to remove excess chemical residues from your growing medium, roots and other plant tissues, including fruits and flowers.

It’s important to understand that Flawless Finish contains a broad range of chelates. This is because there are many individual metals that need to be pulled out of crops. Chelates come in different shapes and sizes and are attracted only to certain metals. Without a diverse range of these chelates, you can’t be sure you’re getting everything out of the crops that you need to get out.

When you use Flawless Finish, the end result — as proven by scientific testing — is a stellar crop of plants that will be free of at least 85 percent of the stored materials they held before flushing.

Now You Know How To Flush Your Crops For Maximum Potency And Yields
As you’ve read today, flushing your crops before harvest is an easy way to improve the quality of your end product.

There are many benefits, and no matter what strain you’re growing or how or where you’re growing it, flushing can benefit you.

Just remember, for best results you’ll want to maximize your flush by using Flawless Finish.
 

GODWORK

Well-Known Member
Im with the dead horse picture ...but I keep preaching Flush Your Bud.
THe shit works...
If You are COCO...Just Feed Your Microbes Earth Juice & RO Water for 2 weeks
 

Rufus T. Firefly

Well-Known Member
What if there was one thing you could do right before you harvest, and no matter the strain, medium or nutrients you were using, this one thing would greatly increase the quality and size of your yields?

Sounds like a magic trick, right?

But it turns out that there is such a trick like this.

In today’s article, we’re going to discuss flushing, including:

What flushing is
Why you should flush
When to flush
How to flush to maximize your results
If you’re not flushing already, then before you harvest you need to read this guide.

If you’re already flushing before harvest, then keep reading because you’re sure to pick up a few techniques, tips and strategies that can really maximize your results!

Plus, if you’re flushing incorrectly, you could be starving your plants. So let’s get into it.

What Is Flushing?
Flushing is the process right before you harvest of trying to flush out all the excess salts, nutrients and other contaminants that build up in your plants.

The way that most growers flush their plants is by giving them plain water with no nutrients for a set period of time.

By watering like usual but with no nutrients, it works to wash out the excess buildup.

However, there is a downside to flushing like this that we’ll get into in a moment — and for this reason, you may want to think twice before flushing your plants with plain water.

But before we talk about that, let’s discuss…

Why You Should Flush Before Harvest
Flushing is a free and easy way to increase the quality of your final harvest. Here’s why: The same process plants use to grow — absorbing compounds from nutrients, water and the atmosphere — causes them to build up excess salts and other harsh compounds.

If you don’t flush out these excesses before harvest, you could compromise the final quality of your crops.

Here are just a few of the reported benefits of flushing your plants:

Can improve the smoothness of the final product and reduce harshness
Can help remove any chemical tastes from the final product
Increased terpenoid production from the slight stress of no nutrients
Increased final bud swell during the final days before harvest
By getting rid of excess nutrients left over from the growing process, you improve the smoothness of the final product.

And the smell and taste of your harvest can also be improved.

It’s also important to note that you can see an increase in both bud size and terpenoid production after the flush, because your plants have more energy to devote to swelling buds and terpene production. They’re not having to spend energy to intake the nutrients you’re normally feeding them.

So the bottom line is that most growers flush to improve the potency, taste, aroma, size and overall quality of their final harvest.

Who Should Flush? Should All Growers Flush Before Harvest?
The good news about flushing is that it’s a trick that works, no matter what type of grower you are and no matter what type of strains you’re growing.

For example, if you’re an outdoor grower using any type of soil as your growing medium, flushing will deliver the same benefits to your crops.

Likewise, if you’re growing indoors and you’re using coco coir, perlite, or other growing mediums along with hydroponics, you can still flush and improve the quality of your harvests.

The main difference is that depending on how you’re growing, you have to adjust how long your flush lasts. Here are some quick guidelines:

Soil growers should flush the longest, at 1–2 weeks.
Coco coir growers should flush for a shorter time, around one week or less (watch to make sure your plant doesn’t turn too yellow too fast, because coco does not hold on to as much extra nutrients).
Deep water culture (DWC) and other hydroponics growers should flush the shortest time, only 1–2 days, because you’re immediately cutting the plants off from nutrients.
When Should You Flush?
You should wait until you think you’re ready to harvest your plants, and then start your flush.

If you flush your plants too early, you can reduce yields and potency. You’ll be starving them of the nutrients they need, right when they need it.

So how do you know when it’s time to harvest your plants?

The best way to see if your plants are ripe and ready for harvest is to look at their glandular stalked trichomes (a.k.a their resin glands) using a magnifying glass. These trichomes look like crystals or frost on well-cultivated buds.

Trichomes change color as they ripen. They start clear, then turn translucent (or milky white) and finally they turn an amber color. You’ll have best results when roughly 50 percent of the trichomes on your plant have turned a milky-white, translucent color. It’s then that most strains are at peak ripeness.

If in doubt? Just wait a little longer.

In short, it’s better to wait a little longer than to flush too early, because you don’t want to reduce your yields in any way.

WARNING: Flushing With Plain Water Can Cost You Yields!
There’s a big problem with flushing with plain water that you might have thought of already.

The point of the flush is to remove any extra and excess contaminants that you don’t want in the final product. And when you flush with plain water, you really are only relying on the water and essentially washing the plant, root system, and growing medium to remove those excesses.

When flushing with plain water, essentially you’re starving your plants of nutrients right before harvest, which can rob you of the last-minute vigorous floral growth and resin production you crave.

So there’s a better way to make sure those excess contaminants are drawn out of your plants, and do it in a way that doesn’t starve your plants in the process.

How To Flush For Maximum Results
Instead of flushing with plain water, which starves your plants and reduces floral growth and resin, you need Flawless Finish.

How To Flush For Maximum Results with Advanced Nutrients Flawless Finish

It uses a broad range of empty chelates — which are like tiny, powerful vacuum cleaners — to remove excess chemical residues from your growing medium, roots and other plant tissues, including fruits and flowers.

It’s important to understand that Flawless Finish contains a broad range of chelates. This is because there are many individual metals that need to be pulled out of crops. Chelates come in different shapes and sizes and are attracted only to certain metals. Without a diverse range of these chelates, you can’t be sure you’re getting everything out of the crops that you need to get out.

When you use Flawless Finish, the end result — as proven by scientific testing — is a stellar crop of plants that will be free of at least 85 percent of the stored materials they held before flushing.

Now You Know How To Flush Your Crops For Maximum Potency And Yields
As you’ve read today, flushing your crops before harvest is an easy way to improve the quality of your end product.

There are many benefits, and no matter what strain you’re growing or how or where you’re growing it, flushing can benefit you.

Just remember, for best results you’ll want to maximize your flush by using Flawless Finish.
Which begs the question of why one is buying nutrients that build up in sufficient quantities harming yield and quality? I guess instead of figuring that out it's easier to just buy another product to "fix" it.
 

sunasun

Active Member
What if there was one thing you could do right before you harvest, and no matter the strain, medium or nutrients you were using, this one thing would greatly increase the quality and size of your yields?

Sounds like a magic trick, right?

But it turns out that there is such a trick like this.

In today’s article, we’re going to discuss flushing, including:

What flushing is
Why you should flush
When to flush
How to flush to maximize your results
If you’re not flushing already, then before you harvest you need to read this guide.

If you’re already flushing before harvest, then keep reading because you’re sure to pick up a few techniques, tips and strategies that can really maximize your results!

Plus, if you’re flushing incorrectly, you could be starving your plants. So let’s get into it.

What Is Flushing?
Flushing is the process right before you harvest of trying to flush out all the excess salts, nutrients and other contaminants that build up in your plants.

The way that most growers flush their plants is by giving them plain water with no nutrients for a set period of time.

By watering like usual but with no nutrients, it works to wash out the excess buildup.

However, there is a downside to flushing like this that we’ll get into in a moment — and for this reason, you may want to think twice before flushing your plants with plain water.

But before we talk about that, let’s discuss…

Why You Should Flush Before Harvest
Flushing is a free and easy way to increase the quality of your final harvest. Here’s why: The same process plants use to grow — absorbing compounds from nutrients, water and the atmosphere — causes them to build up excess salts and other harsh compounds.

If you don’t flush out these excesses before harvest, you could compromise the final quality of your crops.

Here are just a few of the reported benefits of flushing your plants:

Can improve the smoothness of the final product and reduce harshness
Can help remove any chemical tastes from the final product
Increased terpenoid production from the slight stress of no nutrients
Increased final bud swell during the final days before harvest
By getting rid of excess nutrients left over from the growing process, you improve the smoothness of the final product.

And the smell and taste of your harvest can also be improved.

It’s also important to note that you can see an increase in both bud size and terpenoid production after the flush, because your plants have more energy to devote to swelling buds and terpene production. They’re not having to spend energy to intake the nutrients you’re normally feeding them.

So the bottom line is that most growers flush to improve the potency, taste, aroma, size and overall quality of their final harvest.

Who Should Flush? Should All Growers Flush Before Harvest?
The good news about flushing is that it’s a trick that works, no matter what type of grower you are and no matter what type of strains you’re growing.

For example, if you’re an outdoor grower using any type of soil as your growing medium, flushing will deliver the same benefits to your crops.

Likewise, if you’re growing indoors and you’re using coco coir, perlite, or other growing mediums along with hydroponics, you can still flush and improve the quality of your harvests.

The main difference is that depending on how you’re growing, you have to adjust how long your flush lasts. Here are some quick guidelines:

Soil growers should flush the longest, at 1–2 weeks.
Coco coir growers should flush for a shorter time, around one week or less (watch to make sure your plant doesn’t turn too yellow too fast, because coco does not hold on to as much extra nutrients).
Deep water culture (DWC) and other hydroponics growers should flush the shortest time, only 1–2 days, because you’re immediately cutting the plants off from nutrients.
When Should You Flush?
You should wait until you think you’re ready to harvest your plants, and then start your flush.

If you flush your plants too early, you can reduce yields and potency. You’ll be starving them of the nutrients they need, right when they need it.

So how do you know when it’s time to harvest your plants?

The best way to see if your plants are ripe and ready for harvest is to look at their glandular stalked trichomes (a.k.a their resin glands) using a magnifying glass. These trichomes look like crystals or frost on well-cultivated buds.

Trichomes change color as they ripen. They start clear, then turn translucent (or milky white) and finally they turn an amber color. You’ll have best results when roughly 50 percent of the trichomes on your plant have turned a milky-white, translucent color. It’s then that most strains are at peak ripeness.

If in doubt? Just wait a little longer.

In short, it’s better to wait a little longer than to flush too early, because you don’t want to reduce your yields in any way.

WARNING: Flushing With Plain Water Can Cost You Yields!
There’s a big problem with flushing with plain water that you might have thought of already.

The point of the flush is to remove any extra and excess contaminants that you don’t want in the final product. And when you flush with plain water, you really are only relying on the water and essentially washing the plant, root system, and growing medium to remove those excesses.

When flushing with plain water, essentially you’re starving your plants of nutrients right before harvest, which can rob you of the last-minute vigorous floral growth and resin production you crave.

So there’s a better way to make sure those excess contaminants are drawn out of your plants, and do it in a way that doesn’t starve your plants in the process.

How To Flush For Maximum Results
Instead of flushing with plain water, which starves your plants and reduces floral growth and resin, you need Flawless Finish.

How To Flush For Maximum Results with Advanced Nutrients Flawless Finish

It uses a broad range of empty chelates — which are like tiny, powerful vacuum cleaners — to remove excess chemical residues from your growing medium, roots and other plant tissues, including fruits and flowers.

It’s important to understand that Flawless Finish contains a broad range of chelates. This is because there are many individual metals that need to be pulled out of crops. Chelates come in different shapes and sizes and are attracted only to certain metals. Without a diverse range of these chelates, you can’t be sure you’re getting everything out of the crops that you need to get out.

When you use Flawless Finish, the end result — as proven by scientific testing — is a stellar crop of plants that will be free of at least 85 percent of the stored materials they held before flushing.

Now You Know How To Flush Your Crops For Maximum Potency And Yields
As you’ve read today, flushing your crops before harvest is an easy way to improve the quality of your end product.

There are many benefits, and no matter what strain you’re growing or how or where you’re growing it, flushing can benefit you.

Just remember, for best results you’ll want to maximize your flush by using Flawless Finish.
This is sarcasm, correct?
 

Herb & Suds

Well-Known Member
What if there was one thing you could do right before you harvest, and no matter the strain, medium or nutrients you were using, this one thing would greatly increase the quality and size of your yields?

Sounds like a magic trick, right?

But it turns out that there is such a trick like this.

In today’s article, we’re going to discuss flushing, including:

What flushing is
Why you should flush
When to flush
How to flush to maximize your results
If you’re not flushing already, then before you harvest you need to read this guide.

If you’re already flushing before harvest, then keep reading because you’re sure to pick up a few techniques, tips and strategies that can really maximize your results!

Plus, if you’re flushing incorrectly, you could be starving your plants. So let’s get into it.

What Is Flushing?
Flushing is the process right before you harvest of trying to flush out all the excess salts, nutrients and other contaminants that build up in your plants.

The way that most growers flush their plants is by giving them plain water with no nutrients for a set period of time.

By watering like usual but with no nutrients, it works to wash out the excess buildup.

However, there is a downside to flushing like this that we’ll get into in a moment — and for this reason, you may want to think twice before flushing your plants with plain water.

But before we talk about that, let’s discuss…

Why You Should Flush Before Harvest
Flushing is a free and easy way to increase the quality of your final harvest. Here’s why: The same process plants use to grow — absorbing compounds from nutrients, water and the atmosphere — causes them to build up excess salts and other harsh compounds.

If you don’t flush out these excesses before harvest, you could compromise the final quality of your crops.

Here are just a few of the reported benefits of flushing your plants:

Can improve the smoothness of the final product and reduce harshness
Can help remove any chemical tastes from the final product
Increased terpenoid production from the slight stress of no nutrients
Increased final bud swell during the final days before harvest
By getting rid of excess nutrients left over from the growing process, you improve the smoothness of the final product.

And the smell and taste of your harvest can also be improved.

It’s also important to note that you can see an increase in both bud size and terpenoid production after the flush, because your plants have more energy to devote to swelling buds and terpene production. They’re not having to spend energy to intake the nutrients you’re normally feeding them.

So the bottom line is that most growers flush to improve the potency, taste, aroma, size and overall quality of their final harvest.

Who Should Flush? Should All Growers Flush Before Harvest?
The good news about flushing is that it’s a trick that works, no matter what type of grower you are and no matter what type of strains you’re growing.

For example, if you’re an outdoor grower using any type of soil as your growing medium, flushing will deliver the same benefits to your crops.

Likewise, if you’re growing indoors and you’re using coco coir, perlite, or other growing mediums along with hydroponics, you can still flush and improve the quality of your harvests.

The main difference is that depending on how you’re growing, you have to adjust how long your flush lasts. Here are some quick guidelines:

Soil growers should flush the longest, at 1–2 weeks.
Coco coir growers should flush for a shorter time, around one week or less (watch to make sure your plant doesn’t turn too yellow too fast, because coco does not hold on to as much extra nutrients).
Deep water culture (DWC) and other hydroponics growers should flush the shortest time, only 1–2 days, because you’re immediately cutting the plants off from nutrients.
When Should You Flush?
You should wait until you think you’re ready to harvest your plants, and then start your flush.

If you flush your plants too early, you can reduce yields and potency. You’ll be starving them of the nutrients they need, right when they need it.

So how do you know when it’s time to harvest your plants?

The best way to see if your plants are ripe and ready for harvest is to look at their glandular stalked trichomes (a.k.a their resin glands) using a magnifying glass. These trichomes look like crystals or frost on well-cultivated buds.

Trichomes change color as they ripen. They start clear, then turn translucent (or milky white) and finally they turn an amber color. You’ll have best results when roughly 50 percent of the trichomes on your plant have turned a milky-white, translucent color. It’s then that most strains are at peak ripeness.

If in doubt? Just wait a little longer.

In short, it’s better to wait a little longer than to flush too early, because you don’t want to reduce your yields in any way.

WARNING: Flushing With Plain Water Can Cost You Yields!
There’s a big problem with flushing with plain water that you might have thought of already.

The point of the flush is to remove any extra and excess contaminants that you don’t want in the final product. And when you flush with plain water, you really are only relying on the water and essentially washing the plant, root system, and growing medium to remove those excesses.

When flushing with plain water, essentially you’re starving your plants of nutrients right before harvest, which can rob you of the last-minute vigorous floral growth and resin production you crave.

So there’s a better way to make sure those excess contaminants are drawn out of your plants, and do it in a way that doesn’t starve your plants in the process.

How To Flush For Maximum Results
Instead of flushing with plain water, which starves your plants and reduces floral growth and resin, you need Flawless Finish.

How To Flush For Maximum Results with Advanced Nutrients Flawless Finish

It uses a broad range of empty chelates — which are like tiny, powerful vacuum cleaners — to remove excess chemical residues from your growing medium, roots and other plant tissues, including fruits and flowers.

It’s important to understand that Flawless Finish contains a broad range of chelates. This is because there are many individual metals that need to be pulled out of crops. Chelates come in different shapes and sizes and are attracted only to certain metals. Without a diverse range of these chelates, you can’t be sure you’re getting everything out of the crops that you need to get out.

When you use Flawless Finish, the end result — as proven by scientific testing — is a stellar crop of plants that will be free of at least 85 percent of the stored materials they held before flushing.

Now You Know How To Flush Your Crops For Maximum Potency And Yields
As you’ve read today, flushing your crops before harvest is an easy way to improve the quality of your end product.

There are many benefits, and no matter what strain you’re growing or how or where you’re growing it, flushing can benefit you.

Just remember, for best results you’ll want to maximize your flush by using Flawless Finish.
Sounds like an infomercial
Reported as spam
 

Derbud420

Well-Known Member
What if there was one thing you could do right before you harvest, and no matter the strain, medium or nutrients you were using, this one thing would greatly increase the quality and size of your yields?

Sounds like a magic trick, right?

But it turns out that there is such a trick like this.

In today’s article, we’re going to discuss flushing, including:

What flushing is
Why you should flush
When to flush
How to flush to maximize your results
If you’re not flushing already, then before you harvest you need to read this guide.

If you’re already flushing before harvest, then keep reading because you’re sure to pick up a few techniques, tips and strategies that can really maximize your results!

Plus, if you’re flushing incorrectly, you could be starving your plants. So let’s get into it.

What Is Flushing?
Flushing is the process right before you harvest of trying to flush out all the excess salts, nutrients and other contaminants that build up in your plants.

The way that most growers flush their plants is by giving them plain water with no nutrients for a set period of time.

By watering like usual but with no nutrients, it works to wash out the excess buildup.

However, there is a downside to flushing like this that we’ll get into in a moment — and for this reason, you may want to think twice before flushing your plants with plain water.

But before we talk about that, let’s discuss…

Why You Should Flush Before Harvest
Flushing is a free and easy way to increase the quality of your final harvest. Here’s why: The same process plants use to grow — absorbing compounds from nutrients, water and the atmosphere — causes them to build up excess salts and other harsh compounds.

If you don’t flush out these excesses before harvest, you could compromise the final quality of your crops.

Here are just a few of the reported benefits of flushing your plants:

Can improve the smoothness of the final product and reduce harshness
Can help remove any chemical tastes from the final product
Increased terpenoid production from the slight stress of no nutrients
Increased final bud swell during the final days before harvest
By getting rid of excess nutrients left over from the growing process, you improve the smoothness of the final product.

And the smell and taste of your harvest can also be improved.

It’s also important to note that you can see an increase in both bud size and terpenoid production after the flush, because your plants have more energy to devote to swelling buds and terpene production. They’re not having to spend energy to intake the nutrients you’re normally feeding them.

So the bottom line is that most growers flush to improve the potency, taste, aroma, size and overall quality of their final harvest.

Who Should Flush? Should All Growers Flush Before Harvest?
The good news about flushing is that it’s a trick that works, no matter what type of grower you are and no matter what type of strains you’re growing.

For example, if you’re an outdoor grower using any type of soil as your growing medium, flushing will deliver the same benefits to your crops.

Likewise, if you’re growing indoors and you’re using coco coir, perlite, or other growing mediums along with hydroponics, you can still flush and improve the quality of your harvests.

The main difference is that depending on how you’re growing, you have to adjust how long your flush lasts. Here are some quick guidelines:

Soil growers should flush the longest, at 1–2 weeks.
Coco coir growers should flush for a shorter time, around one week or less (watch to make sure your plant doesn’t turn too yellow too fast, because coco does not hold on to as much extra nutrients).
Deep water culture (DWC) and other hydroponics growers should flush the shortest time, only 1–2 days, because you’re immediately cutting the plants off from nutrients.
When Should You Flush?
You should wait until you think you’re ready to harvest your plants, and then start your flush.

If you flush your plants too early, you can reduce yields and potency. You’ll be starving them of the nutrients they need, right when they need it.

So how do you know when it’s time to harvest your plants?

The best way to see if your plants are ripe and ready for harvest is to look at their glandular stalked trichomes (a.k.a their resin glands) using a magnifying glass. These trichomes look like crystals or frost on well-cultivated buds.

Trichomes change color as they ripen. They start clear, then turn translucent (or milky white) and finally they turn an amber color. You’ll have best results when roughly 50 percent of the trichomes on your plant have turned a milky-white, translucent color. It’s then that most strains are at peak ripeness.

If in doubt? Just wait a little longer.

In short, it’s better to wait a little longer than to flush too early, because you don’t want to reduce your yields in any way.

WARNING: Flushing With Plain Water Can Cost You Yields!
There’s a big problem with flushing with plain water that you might have thought of already.

The point of the flush is to remove any extra and excess contaminants that you don’t want in the final product. And when you flush with plain water, you really are only relying on the water and essentially washing the plant, root system, and growing medium to remove those excesses.

When flushing with plain water, essentially you’re starving your plants of nutrients right before harvest, which can rob you of the last-minute vigorous floral growth and resin production you crave.

So there’s a better way to make sure those excess contaminants are drawn out of your plants, and do it in a way that doesn’t starve your plants in the process.

How To Flush For Maximum Results
Instead of flushing with plain water, which starves your plants and reduces floral growth and resin, you need Flawless Finish.

How To Flush For Maximum Results with Advanced Nutrients Flawless Finish

It uses a broad range of empty chelates — which are like tiny, powerful vacuum cleaners — to remove excess chemical residues from your growing medium, roots and other plant tissues, including fruits and flowers.

It’s important to understand that Flawless Finish contains a broad range of chelates. This is because there are many individual metals that need to be pulled out of crops. Chelates come in different shapes and sizes and are attracted only to certain metals. Without a diverse range of these chelates, you can’t be sure you’re getting everything out of the crops that you need to get out.

When you use Flawless Finish, the end result — as proven by scientific testing — is a stellar crop of plants that will be free of at least 85 percent of the stored materials they held before flushing.

Now You Know How To Flush Your Crops For Maximum Potency And Yields
As you’ve read today, flushing your crops before harvest is an easy way to improve the quality of your end product.

There are many benefits, and no matter what strain you’re growing or how or where you’re growing it, flushing can benefit you.

Just remember, for best results you’ll want to maximize your flush by using Flawless Finish.
Nice write up. Too bad it's all wrong
 

Synchronicity

Well-Known Member
This subject gets put through the wringer every once in a while. Why not try both and see what works for you.
I tend to flush it about a week before harvest depending on how much nutes show up in a soil test. If they are high- I flush. My last 2 grows took longer than I planned to harvest- so they depleted the nutes too long before the chop.

Moral of my story:

It is your call and your grow. Go with what works for you but if you are not sure of your chop date then wait or dont flush at all............. if you wait too long then there is not enough green left in the buds and they turn brown. Especially if all the nitrogen has been used up........

If I flush longer than about a week - then I can suffer in bud quality from lack of needed nutes......

Depending on strain and grow environment. That is why you never see a consensus on this one........
Its not a popularity contest if you just want the best buds possible in your situation. So, as usual, it depends........ on you and your environment.........

I flush to get the nute "taste" out of the smoke if I can


for what its worth


:blsmoke:
 

bk78

Well-Known Member
This subject gets put through the wringer every once in a while. Why not try both and see what works for you.
I tend to flush it about a week before harvest depending on how much nutes show up in a soil test. If they are high- I flush. My last 2 grows took longer than I planned to harvest- so they depleted the nutes too long before the chop.

Moral of my story:

It is your call and your grow. Go with what works for you but if you are not sure of your chop date then wait or dont flush at all............. if you wait too long then there is not enough green left in the buds and they turn brown. Especially if all the nitrogen has been used up........

If I flush longer than about a week - then I can suffer in bud quality from lack of needed nutes......

Depending on strain and grow environment. That is why you never see a consensus on this one........
Its not a popularity contest if you just want the best buds possible in your situation. So, as usual, it depends........ on you and your environment.........

I flush to get the nute "taste" out of the smoke if I can


for what its worth


:blsmoke:
So you do a soil test every run a week before you think it’s harvest time?

Also what’s “nute taste”
 

GODWORK

Well-Known Member
THAT : Chemical Black Carbon Sparkling Harsh GARBO!!
Average Dispo Discount Flower.
MOST Street Dealers have it...
The shit KING took a Royal PISS On... in BOTH Cannabible Vol's

I Low Key Closed The Gap between SOIL & HYDRO...
Nobody Really Knows It...But I Did.
I Grew Up in The ERA of Soil vs Hydro...
So Most of My Days were comparing My Hydro to Soil Seed Testers.
I didnt know How to Manipulate My Feed to get RESPONSIVE growth Or 'Inter- Growth' Bag Appeal.
Then One Day I MIXED both... like, Light DEP....

I ran 5 gal. buckets of CoCo in 2020...To expand My plant count
My last Harvest was in Dec. 2016

In 2020, I saw CRAZY plant activity from 3 clones...
I was Playing With The AT600...New Feed Techniques...better skills
However, ...I wanted to see PH/PPM/EC in DWC/COCO Growth...With The New Amendments....Mainly, The AT600 with a LANDRACE sativa
I watched @gene run The Blue Dream ...Then The Blackberry Kush...
Then He Started building COBS...
He FOUND the Kelvin Sweet Spots... but COBS where Not Made in Spectrum
MOUSE picked Up There...RAPID LED.
Then The Samsung HLG....That MOST people use Today...

I contacted Apache Tech about ULTRA Spectrum Parts....
You can Kit Out AT200 & AT600 Parts...
The New Line Up has a Linear AT600....Like a 4' ft T5
LED AT SPECTRUM & Kelvin ...EXPLOSIVE Research.

13 inch Fan Leaf... vs The New T5 Research I have been sitting on
Its Ugly....
No Other Light Source Is SETUP this way ...& T5's plug & play ability is better Than Any OTHER Light...for this type research
No HPS
No MH
No LED...
This Shit Is EXPLOSIVE....ONLY T5's Can Perform This Way
The Only Issue is The PLANT SIZE @54w bulbs & fixed lumens

I can afford to do a single private side by side....for personal R & D...But It would have to blow my sock OFF to convert My Grow...
Im LowKey Afraid It Will...Its TOO Dialed In...
IF this T5- Light Combination Can TAME a PURE LANDRACE @ 11/13... PERFECTLY...Ill Switch Over ,,,Even At a Loss in FINAL WT.
 
Last edited:

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
What if there was one thing you could do right before you harvest, and no matter the strain, medium or nutrients you were using, this one thing would greatly increase the quality and size of your yields?

Sounds like a magic trick, right?

But it turns out that there is such a trick like this.

In today’s article, we’re going to discuss flushing, including:

What flushing is
Why you should flush
When to flush
How to flush to maximize your results
If you’re not flushing already, then before you harvest you need to read this guide.

If you’re already flushing before harvest, then keep reading because you’re sure to pick up a few techniques, tips and strategies that can really maximize your results!

Plus, if you’re flushing incorrectly, you could be starving your plants. So let’s get into it.

What Is Flushing?
Flushing is the process right before you harvest of trying to flush out all the excess salts, nutrients and other contaminants that build up in your plants.

The way that most growers flush their plants is by giving them plain water with no nutrients for a set period of time.

By watering like usual but with no nutrients, it works to wash out the excess buildup.

However, there is a downside to flushing like this that we’ll get into in a moment — and for this reason, you may want to think twice before flushing your plants with plain water.

But before we talk about that, let’s discuss…

Why You Should Flush Before Harvest
Flushing is a free and easy way to increase the quality of your final harvest. Here’s why: The same process plants use to grow — absorbing compounds from nutrients, water and the atmosphere — causes them to build up excess salts and other harsh compounds.

If you don’t flush out these excesses before harvest, you could compromise the final quality of your crops.

Here are just a few of the reported benefits of flushing your plants:

Can improve the smoothness of the final product and reduce harshness
Can help remove any chemical tastes from the final product
Increased terpenoid production from the slight stress of no nutrients
Increased final bud swell during the final days before harvest
By getting rid of excess nutrients left over from the growing process, you improve the smoothness of the final product.

And the smell and taste of your harvest can also be improved.

It’s also important to note that you can see an increase in both bud size and terpenoid production after the flush, because your plants have more energy to devote to swelling buds and terpene production. They’re not having to spend energy to intake the nutrients you’re normally feeding them.

So the bottom line is that most growers flush to improve the potency, taste, aroma, size and overall quality of their final harvest.

Who Should Flush? Should All Growers Flush Before Harvest?
The good news about flushing is that it’s a trick that works, no matter what type of grower you are and no matter what type of strains you’re growing.

For example, if you’re an outdoor grower using any type of soil as your growing medium, flushing will deliver the same benefits to your crops.

Likewise, if you’re growing indoors and you’re using coco coir, perlite, or other growing mediums along with hydroponics, you can still flush and improve the quality of your harvests.

The main difference is that depending on how you’re growing, you have to adjust how long your flush lasts. Here are some quick guidelines:

Soil growers should flush the longest, at 1–2 weeks.
Coco coir growers should flush for a shorter time, around one week or less (watch to make sure your plant doesn’t turn too yellow too fast, because coco does not hold on to as much extra nutrients).
Deep water culture (DWC) and other hydroponics growers should flush the shortest time, only 1–2 days, because you’re immediately cutting the plants off from nutrients.
When Should You Flush?
You should wait until you think you’re ready to harvest your plants, and then start your flush.

If you flush your plants too early, you can reduce yields and potency. You’ll be starving them of the nutrients they need, right when they need it.

So how do you know when it’s time to harvest your plants?

The best way to see if your plants are ripe and ready for harvest is to look at their glandular stalked trichomes (a.k.a their resin glands) using a magnifying glass. These trichomes look like crystals or frost on well-cultivated buds.

Trichomes change color as they ripen. They start clear, then turn translucent (or milky white) and finally they turn an amber color. You’ll have best results when roughly 50 percent of the trichomes on your plant have turned a milky-white, translucent color. It’s then that most strains are at peak ripeness.

If in doubt? Just wait a little longer.

In short, it’s better to wait a little longer than to flush too early, because you don’t want to reduce your yields in any way.

WARNING: Flushing With Plain Water Can Cost You Yields!
There’s a big problem with flushing with plain water that you might have thought of already.

The point of the flush is to remove any extra and excess contaminants that you don’t want in the final product. And when you flush with plain water, you really are only relying on the water and essentially washing the plant, root system, and growing medium to remove those excesses.

When flushing with plain water, essentially you’re starving your plants of nutrients right before harvest, which can rob you of the last-minute vigorous floral growth and resin production you crave.

So there’s a better way to make sure those excess contaminants are drawn out of your plants, and do it in a way that doesn’t starve your plants in the process.

How To Flush For Maximum Results
Instead of flushing with plain water, which starves your plants and reduces floral growth and resin, you need Flawless Finish.

How To Flush For Maximum Results with Advanced Nutrients Flawless Finish

It uses a broad range of empty chelates — which are like tiny, powerful vacuum cleaners — to remove excess chemical residues from your growing medium, roots and other plant tissues, including fruits and flowers.

It’s important to understand that Flawless Finish contains a broad range of chelates. This is because there are many individual metals that need to be pulled out of crops. Chelates come in different shapes and sizes and are attracted only to certain metals. Without a diverse range of these chelates, you can’t be sure you’re getting everything out of the crops that you need to get out.

When you use Flawless Finish, the end result — as proven by scientific testing — is a stellar crop of plants that will be free of at least 85 percent of the stored materials they held before flushing.

Now You Know How To Flush Your Crops For Maximum Potency And Yields
As you’ve read today, flushing your crops before harvest is an easy way to improve the quality of your end product.

There are many benefits, and no matter what strain you’re growing or how or where you’re growing it, flushing can benefit you.

Just remember, for best results you’ll want to maximize your flush by using Flawless Finish.
Does AN know you're plagiarizing their work?
 

dbz

Well-Known Member
THAT : Chemical Black Carbon Sparkling Harsh GARBO!!
Average Dispo Discount Flower.
MOST Street Dealers have it...
The shit KING took a Royal PISS On... in BOTH Cannabible Vol's

I Low Key Closed The Gap between SOIL & HYDRO...
Nobody Really Knows It...But I Did.
I Grew Up in The ERA of Soil vs Hydro...
So Most of My Days were comparing My Hydro to Soil Seed Testers.
I didnt know How to Manipulate My Feed to get RESPONSIVE growth Or 'Inter- Growth' Bag Appeal.
Then One Day I MIXED both... like, Light DEP....

I ran 5 gal. buckets of CoCo in 2020...To expand My plant count
My last Harvest was in Dec. 2016

In 2020, I saw CRAZY plant activity from 3 clones...
I was Playing With The AT600...New Feed Techniques...better skills
However, ...I wanted to see PH/PPM/EC in DWC/COCO Growth...With The New Amendments....Mainly, The AT600 with a LANDRACE sativa
I watched @gene run The Blue Dream ...Then The Blackberry Kush...
Then He Started building COBS...
He FOUND the Kelvin Sweet Spots... but COBS where Not Made in Spectrum
MOUSE picked Up There...RAPID LED.
Then The Samsung HLG....That MOST people use Today...

I contacted Apache Tech about ULTRA Spectrum Parts....
You can Kit Out AT200 & AT600 Parts...
The New Line Up has a Linear AT600....Like a 4' ft T5
LED AT SPECTRUM & Kelvin ...EXPLOSIVE Research.

13 inch Fan Leaf... vs The New T5 Research I have been sitting on
Its Ugly....
No Other Light Source Is SETUP this way ...& T5's plug & play ability is better Than Any OTHER Light...for this type research
No HPS
No MH
No LED...
This Shit Is EXPLOSIVE....ONLY T5's Can Perform This Way
The Only Issue is The PLANT SIZE @54w bulbs & fixed lumens

I can afford to do a single private side by side....for personal R & D...But It would have to blow my sock OFF to convert My Grow...
Im LowKey Afraid It Will...Its TOO Dialed In...
IF this T5- Light Combination Can TAME a PURE LANDRACE @ 11/13... PERFECTLY...Ill Switch Over ,,,Even At a Loss in FINAL WT.
Naturally a flush thread should have nonsensical off subject rambling about lights because why not?
 
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