Django66
Well-Known Member
It's all good. I'm a healthy skeptic too.Seems like a great product! Lmao real 'user friendly'
I'll shut up now
It's all good. I'm a healthy skeptic too.Seems like a great product! Lmao real 'user friendly'
I'll shut up now
Amazing so far. Basic soil and keep an eye on the rest of the environment. That's it basically. More time for fishing! I'll look for your posts.I love my autopots. I have an 8 pot system and a 4 pot. I use coco/perlite. Search my posts for grow journal.
The pots worked great for about a month and a half. Soon the largest of the plants would droop by the middle of the day no matter what amount of water was in the pan. The pots never dried out completely on the bottom once the plant stopped using water. That last bit of water that the plant never used just sat and stagnated. It was enough to turn the plant pale and send me down the wrong path. I poured and prayed like an idiot. I did check my water ph. and it was 7.1. I stopped using water from the kitchen sink. I have rusty fart water in my well which passes through an iron and Sulphur filter, a water softener and whole house sediment filter. If I bypass all that and draw water directly from the pressure tank the PH is 6.5. A little better. My soil should adjust any minor PH issues. I think traces of sodium from the water softener backwash builds up after time.The system is designed to give you a dry back period. The plants will drink what they want, there is no need to add more/less water. The top layer is supposed to be drier or dry, that's how bottom watering works. PH is very important.
I have found the lighter the soil mix the better i.e. 50/50 mix soil/perlite although now I use pumice and soil mixes that have a high amount of peat or coco, they are lightweight and sold as suitable for hanging baskets. Also make sure to thoroughly rinse your perlite/pebbles etc before use, otherwise you can end up with a mushy paste and sediment at the bottom of your pots and in the trays.Harvested. Great buds, fair yield for small abused plants. Fantastic smoke, Black Strap, Sour Stomper, Ace of Spades and Double Grape. All winners. I wish I didn't screw them up.
I've concluded that my attempts to cure the overwatering problem caused by the pots, by pouring on fertilizers, just about killed my plant's. that's not entirely the fault of the auto pot set up. I'm not sure soil (Baccto lite potting mix) is the best medium to use in the Auto Pots despite following the Autopot directions for soil. After chopping the plants I waited a few days and then turned over the pots to do a root inspection. This is what I found in all four pots. The layer of perlite at the bottom of the pot was a white paste with no roots at all. In the center of the bottom just over the perlite layer a soggy dome of soil remained with very little roots (probably dead). The roots were mainly around the sides and directly under the main stem. Not much of a tap root on any of the plants. There were no foul or rotten odors in the soil.
For getting plants started the pots got them through the first few weeks. That's the time I usually over/under water. It solves that problem perfectly. What I think I need to do is remove any plant from the system that shows any signs of over watering. Let it dry back a bit and/or just start top watering like normal. I'm not giving up on the Auto pots at all. I just picked the two hardest things to begin with. Autopots and Autoflowers.
Master What is Hard First. Then your future will be easier.
I'm trying out cucumbers, cherry tomatoes and mellons in the pots until I get the hang of them. Cheaper seeds to practice with.
I am trying again with much lighter soil mix. My soil has been way too heavy and holds way too much water. This round I'm using an organic soil with all the buzz words like lobster and kelp meal, vermicompost, green sand, micro rhizomes, chicken crap etc. I screened out all the composted tree bark and other small stones and crap. I think tree bark has a lot of waxy stuff that makes it water repellent. I saved it for the bottom of the pots for drainage along with some pummace. After adding lots of perlite, vermiculite and Amstellite , one pot of soil made three. Here's my reasoning. A five gallon pot full of water weighs 40 lbs. If I'm struggling to lift a 3 gallon pot then the soil is way too wet and heavy. No matter what medium is in the pot a five gallon pot should probably weigh more like 10 - 12 pounds, not 30 pounds. Also, because I found dry patches with no roots in many of my pots I made sure to screen the soil after wetting it down. I filled the pots with soil like I always do. When I finished I dumped them all out on the screen and worked out all the dry and wet clumps. I was surprised to find dry patches so now I know I have solved one of my problems. I'm not going to screw around with liquid nutes or ph. up and down. My tomato plants look fantastic without any of that crap. I guess I'll have to get a pool to go with my (expensive) ph. meter. p.s. I drank the Amstellite.I have found the lighter the soil mix the better i.e. 50/50 mix soil/perlite although now I use pumice and soil mixes that have a high amount of peat or coco, they are lightweight and sold as suitable for hanging baskets. Also make sure to thoroughly rinse your perlite/pebbles etc before use, otherwise you can end up with a mushy paste and sediment at the bottom of your pots and in the trays.