Nope ... it goes curved, not flat. That's just an approximation on small scales.
The ocean is water in a giant container. The water surface is rounded like the earth.
A plane is on air.
A ship is on water.
From what I am reading, it seems like people filter rainwater more for 'crap in the collection systems than the rain water itself. Dirty pipes and tanks.
Major Plant Nutrients in Rainwater
Research by Allen, Carlisle, White and Evans, at the UK’s Nature Conservancy, measured the total quantity of major plant nutrients in collected rainwater over a three-year period at five sites in Britain. The following figures are reported
N (nitrogen)...
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/05/why-people-believe-the-earth-is-flat-and-we-should-listen-to-anti-vaxxers
Why people believe the Earth is flat and we should listen to anti-vaxxers
There are existential, epistemic and social reasons that appear to drive people to...
Answer the basic questions, and we can try to help.
Yes, it looks like mould or fungus.
White as you said.
But is it the white mycelium of whatever you are trying to culture, or is it just random white mould or fungus.
Assuming that you're trying to culture psilocybin ... then it should look...
Great illustration!
And to add to this, each repotting is usually into a 'stronger' or richer soil.
1. Germination to seedling cups
Here you want a soil that drains well, and isn't nutrient heavy or even vaguely hot.
- young seedling roots are more sensitive
- if you make the roots search out...
That's from a human article.
Your plants need many of those too.
And there's the iron that was pointed out by @buckaclark in one of the first responses.
I'm not familiar with any of the commercial products - I forage for fresh kelp myself.
Here's a recent thread with some opinions.
https://rollitup.org/t/gs-plants-fish-kelp-liquid-fert.1079767/
You won't need a lot ... it's one teaspoon to a gallon of water type of dilution ratios.
You'll...
No, I got that.
I'm saying that tap water is better. Ignore chlorination stories, especially for your first grow.
Unless your local water supply is really f-cked up pH wise, use that ... it has trace elements and minerals that your plants need. Those might be in small quantities, but they are...
The ill effects of chlorination in the water have been overplayed.
It won't hurt your plant at all, and cannabis needs a little chlorine to be healthy.
The only downside is that the chlorine can (marginally) reduce your microbe population, but it's not that big a deal.
Let the tap water sit...
Anyone feel free to shoot me down if I'm wrong, but if your water doesn't have trace elements, then isn't a 'sea based' feed a good source to get those?
Maybe try a little fish hydrolysate or kelp.
Broad range of trace elements and micronutrients in those, and couldn't do any harm I reckon.
@farmerfischer
No need to apologise to this "user".
He's working the community forums for free advertising, and professing innocence, and playing the victim card.
He knows exactly what he is doing.
A vinegar trap helped me out when those buggers were attacking my psilocybin grow.
I used apple cider vinegar and fresh orange juice.
Obviously, try to deal with the root cause, but this works well to catch and kill the flying adults.
Yes, they have temperature control, but not by degrees, just a graded dial rheostat. You will need to 'calibrate' with a thermometer to find your ideal setting.
I saw this earlier today in another thread. Looks great and super slim for tight spaces.
Drying
Letting enough moisture evaporate from the buds to allow the weed to combust - so that you can inhale the smoke.
Curing
Allowing the life processes to continue in a regulated and controlled manner - to bring out the best qualities and most enjoyable flavours and smoking experience.
- -...