Silky Shagsalot
Well-Known Member
lol, that's funny, cause i just asked about what lighting you use at your organic thread grow...Next to hid guys hating on led guys... Ironically most dispensaries have horrible buds...
lol, that's funny, cause i just asked about what lighting you use at your organic thread grow...Next to hid guys hating on led guys... Ironically most dispensaries have horrible buds...
Sorry i actually skipped this question initially, i thought u where kidding, lol ph and down in organics... Yup cant awnser that because i cant take it serious.That was the Question.
I even warned you the question was
coming.
The rest was me trying to make sense
out of my grandpas grow style.
He was organic by the way
Trying to figure out his thought process as It would be impossible to ask him.
My grow is all organic
I dont boil my soil
I reuse it in my garden.
As far as advice
You passed over the question and latched onto dying microbes I can replace for a few pennies when
I throw my leftover tea in the yard
Good day Sirs!!!
Hyroot answered
The microbial life is easily added, but not easily assimilated. Mycorrhizae fungi start out as spores, attach themselves to the plants roots, and then grow out throughout the pot which helps the plant uptake water and nutrients. This does not happen over night. In fact, the addition of mycorrhizae fungi does very little for the plant when first applied. It's greatest benefit is realized when you re-use that soil as it has become established in the medium, along with the rest of the microbes in the soil food web.this whole, "soil is the end product," thing you are talking about, i don't get. the microbial life you are talking about are easily added when needed. you don't need to feed them after you harvest out of your medium. and they are very cheap to apply. i also feel the same as char about flushing organic medium. it will more than likely have nutes in it. it doesn't matter if they're organic does it? the plant can't tell the difference. only knows it has nutes it wants/needs. it doesn't care if it's organic or not...
I am more concerned with the medium. My number one job as an organic farmer is to create a healthy, thriving soil. The billions of microbes that are present in the soil take care of the rest. The end result is happy healthy plants. When using synthetics you are in charge. You have to determine what nutrient to use, how much of it to use, and when to use it. In organics you load the soil up with organic amendments, and inoculate the soil with billions of microbes that go to work processing the ingredients that you added. They in turn work in unison with the plant, giving it exactly what it wants when it wants it.ok, i hear you. without trying to sound sarcastic. it sounds like you're more concerned with your medium, than you are the reason for it, which is growing. i know this is one of those subjects that just goes back and forth. i respect your choice, it's just not mine. grow on...
i might give it a try, the whole organic thing. there is one thing i do remember liking about soil. over-all less work. feeding a half dozen plants every day can get labor intensive, lol. i'm actually gonna be doing a test grow with some outdoor gens. this might be the perfect time to try it. could you point me in the right direction for a basic organic recipe,nothing fancy, just the basics? thank you in advance!
for sure... me and anyone in the organic section will be more than happy to help. Just ask when you need to.thanks hy, i really appreciate it. i might start a thread on the grow here. i may be picking your brain once i get started...
Well I think my learning deficit is less about the web and micro herdAs far as flushing "nutes" from the soil, I'm really struggling to understand the point of this. Perhaps you and char aren't familiar with how nutrients in an organic medium becom bio available. The "nutes" (alfalfa meal, fish meal, etc) that are added to the soil are useless to the plant until the microbial colony in the medium break them down (eat them), and through death and defication they are then bio available
Alright ill be watching.Watch dawgs 600w led grow in the led section. Me and a couple people are devising a plan to help dawg come up with a true natural organic hydro regiment.. He has a few tents to trial and error with..
Well I think my learning deficit is less about the web and micro herd
and more about what is actually being
taken in or created within the plant that differs from the hydro guys.
I think once I get solid on that my brain will draw a logical conclusion about flushing.
I have been watching vids and reading
so I hope to arrive at that conclusion someday. I dropped out of school
at the start of 8th grade and am presently
45 so as you can imagine im pretty
remedial. :thumbup:
Im hoping teaming with nutrients will
shed a bit more light for me but if you
have any recomendations let me know.
I have teaming with microbes but still
no idea why a hydro bud would contain
anything different than a food web bud
unless the only difference is one is artificial and one is not.
But again I get hung there
Anyway.
Ill keep checking back hopefully
with either an understanding
or specific questions.
The plant or the soil?Chems and synths never break down.. Natural organic material breaks down quickly.. Chemical reactions, chemical change , and chemicals are completely different. edta is man made synthesized acetate. Water freezing into ice is chemical reaction or chemical change.. Flushing is to rid the plant of salts.