Let me ask you this snutter, did you actually have ph problems where your plant was suffering before you started to monitor your PH as closely as you do?
I ask this because I know how easy it is to get caught up in getting too paranoid about our plants and it takes the fun out of growing.
Do you not agree that in Hydro that you see problems pretty quickly but you could fix them pretty quickly as well?
I feel that if you have been growing your plant one way the whole time and it was doing fine but suddenly the plant started yellowing and wilting, then I would assume that there is a nutrient lockout due to a PH imbalance or a salt buildup in the medium that would require flushing. This would be a quick fix, then you could go back to playing Xbox or something.
I think when you're growing your own, it should be an enjoyable experience, unless it's for profit. When you try to monitor everything and make changes too quickly, I feel it takes the fun out of gardening and makes it feel as if you're at work.
I'll tell you what. GreenThumbSucker said it's obvious that I've never grown Hydro for which he is correct. So far, I've successfully finished a veg stage where I hardly monitored my PH level at all and the 2 mother plants that I grew came out great. I'm almost in the flowering stage because I'm waiting for 7 more cuttings to root. I'm going to continue my grow without monitoring the PH on an OCD level and at the end, which should be around January, I'll let you all know what problems I had during the flowering stage.
A couple of observations:Let me ask you this snutter, did you actually have ph problems where your plant was suffering before you started to monitor your PH as closely as you do?
I ask this because I know how easy it is to get caught up in getting too paranoid about our plants and it takes the fun out of growing.
Do you not agree that in Hydro that you see problems pretty quickly but you could fix them pretty quickly as well?
I feel that if you have been growing your plant one way the whole time and it was doing fine but suddenly the plant started yellowing and wilting, then I would assume that there is a nutrient lockout due to a PH imbalance or a salt buildup in the medium that would require flushing. This would be a quick fix, then you could go back to playing Xbox or something.
I think when you're growing your own, it should be an enjoyable experience, unless it's for profit. When you try to monitor everything and make changes too quickly, I feel it takes the fun out of gardening and makes it feel as if you're at work.
I'll tell you what. GreenThumbSucker said it's obvious that I've never grown Hydro for which he is correct. So far, I've successfully finished a veg stage where I hardly monitored my PH level at all and the 2 mother plants that I grew came out great. I'm almost in the flowering stage because I'm waiting for 7 more cuttings to root. I'm going to continue my grow without monitoring the PH on an OCD level and at the end, which should be around January, I'll let you all know what problems I had during the flowering stage.
I didn't mean any kind of insult by saying you or anybody else has OCD. Its just a terminology that me and my peers use all the time and we never mean any insult by it. I get all OCD at work sometimes because I enjoy my craft.Well, I didn't to sound like I was agreeing with his OCD assesment. I generally don't like name calling and smack talking on forums....It's a waste of time, and uncool!
Anyways, yes I did have a PH problem that affected my plants. The PH meter that I bought was reading on point high (i.e. a reading of 7.0 would really be an 8.0). This was causing nute lockout.
My 2nd problem I've encountered was I was given the wrong feeding instructions from a fellow grow friend. I corrected this by doing some reading on this site, the web, and joining the forums here.
As far as checking my PH levels, I check them once a day. If they are within +3 or +4 tenths of my target of 5.3, I don't mess with them. If so, I correct them. I'm definitely not paranoid about PH levels needing to be perfect at all times, hahha. I'm happy to hear that the system you've found works so well for you, bro!!! That's killer! If it works, don't fix it...
I agree with you about why to grow. I do it because I love it, and I love to smoke. It's been the greatest hobby I've ever had and I'm very much enjoying the experience, even if I do get a bit stressed out by my girls every now and then.
Hey dude, no offense but you can't close the case if I hadn't had a chance to respond.A couple of observations:
1) You shouldn't give out poor advice to people on subjects about which you are unawares - anyone who's ever grown hydroponically (myself included) will tell you that pH is massively important, and the swings that you describe (from 5.5 to 7 in a day) would be horrendous - long story short, you need to monitor your pH and keep it in an acceptable range, unless you're so dialed in that you know your pH will never drift +/- .5 from your goal.
Case closed.
2) I don't think that being attentive and managing one's grow "takes the fun out of it" - the "fun" for me is growing the best weed possible, which unfortunately entails some time and effort - "if it was easy, everyone would do it".
3) Now, perhaps your "devil may care" attitude is a breakthrough and the next level in growing the best weed possible (I kinda doubt it, but I've been wrong before), but I would wait until you've harvested many (but for God's sake at least one) hydro crop before you begin dispensing advice to newbs who don't know any better.
Just my $.02.
Petrol,Hey dude, no offense but you can't close the case if I hadn't had a chance to respond.
On the back of my nutrient bottle, it says to maintain the PH from 5.5 to 6.5 for best results. They don't zero in on a specific number and tell you that it HAS to be that certain number. They give a you range and as long as you're in that range, there's nothing to worry about.
Peace, dude.