hey fdd...if ya can't give em away..what about this option? LOL
yeah for a lizard. ha ha hahahahahhahaha
hey fdd...if ya can't give em away..what about this option? LOL
nice fuckin plants, btw.....
Learned a little trick accidently.
When the plant is about a month old I give mine a diluted drink of OMRI Alaska fish fert. This causes the stems to become rubbery. Only seems to last for a few days. The branches bow out (same effect as when people tie large plants down almost) and seem to become thicker. This allows more light to reach each stem and each potential bud site.
I don't have any exact measurements. Just discovered this. Will take notes and keep track next year. But the fert is cheap (a gallon is less then $10).
Just one of my goofy experiments. They usually bomb though.
im going to have to start my atf, it's from kenai ak, and is as close to original genes as a local alaskan can getthat one seemed to work. i can see the colas already. HUGE. i know i mentioned elsewhere that the atf i got is a club clone. not sure if is the real deal but ours do look similar. except yours are nicer.
If you have to change it do it slow..your plant has adjusted to its current ph level being bad or good its used to it...make your changes slow over a wek of watering to drop 1.0I have been breaking the rules to see how far I can push it. I haven't test the ph level once yet. I know that it is more critical in flowering. I am at the point now where I am about to give in and start. I don't want to lose this crop it's looking too good. Any suggestions? Should I ride it out and not ph at all or give in and start ph testing my water?
SERIOUSLY..........................NO JOKE......................i have no idea what PH is. seriously. used a pool strip once at the faucet. it was fine. that was the only time in 20 years i've ever checked PH. seriously.
If you're growing in soil, why do you need to ph your irrigation water?Any suggestions? Should I ride it out and not ph at all or give in and start ph testing my water?
If you're growing in soil, why do you need to ph your irrigation water?
Compost is to a large extent self buffering, this depends on the ingredients in the compost, but most are. What this means in practical terms is this - the compost will come with it's own ph, usually somewhere between 6 - 7, and that is only going to move if you use either extremely acidic or alkaline irrigation water and lots of it and even then it will be a very slow movement and you'll have either repotted or harvested by the time it goes out of whack. You can improve soil buffering by the addition dolomite lime, which will ensure the compost ph can never go over 7.0 no matter how much alkaline water you feed it.
The use of commercial ph adjusters consisting of acids, can cause a lot more harm than good, particularly if you use a lot of them because they can kill the soil micro organisms and beneficial bacteria.
Seems crazy to do that in soil, if you don't have to.
If you must ph adjust your water, then use natural, organic non-harmful materials like citric and acetic acid, vinegar etc to lower ph and something like dolomite lime to raise it. Be aware though, that any ph adjusters used will affect the nutrient/water ec, so make sure you check your water/nutrient feed ec after you ph adjust.