newbplantgrower420
Well-Known Member
Ive been doing flood and drain with these new and improved. I feel like they keep in way more moisture than the old grey ones. Basically I flood until near the top of the 6 inch hugo block and gotta wait a few days until it gets almost completely bone dry. Right before they wilt.You are going to have massive spikes in ph and EC of the block which is going to make it harder to grow anything and at that point you'd likely see plant wilt from lack of moisture. A 10-20% saturated rw block is dry/light AF. And if you are fertigating correctly there's really no way to get that much dryback in a 24 hour period.
More importantly - and This is per Grodan literature and I can't explain why - the structure of the RW fibers supposedly changes after an extreme dryback and the block will never saturate to the same % as new. Again, that's what they say, I dunno.
Lots of dryback talk, and it's important as it pertains to crop steering. But as far as growing in rockwool, you can grow kick ass plants by top feeding to runoff every hour during lights on, keeping your blocks fully saturated and just letting them dryback at night, then start back feeding to runoff the next morning. Its nute wasteful, but it grows nice plants, and is probably the best bet if someone is just starting rockwool.
Im thinking of switching to those quick drain pargro blocks for flood and drain so they drain quicker. What do you think?