Well I definitely dont solely rely on this forum, but I will say maybe I read the tea leaves more than I should sometimes. For example PThort says that PHing the water won't fix PH of the medium and it's actually carbonate and bicarbonate levels in the water that dictate the PH drift. Though I was aware of the water properties, the Internet overwhelmingly fixates purely on water PH which can also help explain why someone with 8 PH well water might have great success because they are lucky enough to have the right natural alkalinity to not fuck it up. I've also heard using a lot of PH down to try to get the PH in range can hurt the carbonate/bicarbonates in the water. Any insights on this? Foliage Pro has a ton of nitrate based N compared to ammonium or urea, combined with natural 7.8 PH water would that cause PH drift upwards over time regardless of feed PH? I suppose the test would be to measure the PH runoff over a period of time, probably with fresh waterings so the existing feed won't throw off the readings as much. My two focuses will be on feed strength and PH. Honestly even just cutting feed way back should right the helm at this point.
Maintaining pH 5.6-6.2 in growing medium requires more than water pH adjustment. Find out what other factors need to be taken into account.
www.pthorticulture.com
How did you settle on feed, feed, water? What's the frequency between waterings? I used to do feed, water, feed every 3 days for several years until it was suggested that my plants could get hungry during what is almost a 6 day period between feedings. I'm not overly concerned as I've recovered from far worse and it's all about challenging what we believe to be true to continue to improve. For shits and giggles, here's the results of my very first grow several years ago.