Jack Harer
Well-Known Member
And despite what you may hear about the inferiority of organic buds, I'll put them up against anything of equal genetics for size and potency!!!

No, Hydro is too complicated for me, plus I have absolutely no faith in mechanical shit. Pumps, timers, microswitches. Too much to break. I fell into organics and stayed there. It's natural, the bud tastes WAAY better, and it's a lot easier. No need to complicate things for me. Hydro has that certain high tech "mad scientist" appeal going on, but me... I'm just old and lazy. I have zero problems,...and I get great bud.Oh, I assumed you were growing hydro, lol.
But I should still pH balance everything right?That SHOULD do it for you, just stick to the program and don't obsess or freak out at every little "hangnail" the plants exhibit. Most people end up in trouble because they immediately FREAK when a leaf isn't quite as green today as it was yesterday, or a leaf starts curling a bit. They hit the forums and get 7 or 8 different diagnoses and they try all of the remedies. Instant soil and nute overload. Just take things easy and you'll be just fine.
Not really. You should be fine as is when you start the grow. Go ahead and check the pH of the runoff a few times too get a feel for where it is, but unless you have highly alkaline water you should be good to go. The thing about having that pH pen is IF you do have a nutrient deficiency, you can immediately rule out pH lock out as a culprit. I target my pH to right at 6.8. It can be 6.2 or 7, and I don't bat an eye. IF it DOES start to drift, the first thing I look at is the cause of it drifting. But once you're dialed in, and you do the same thing all the time, it won't drift. When you start feeding the nutes, don't deviate. If you do nothing to change the pH, it cannot just change itself. With chemical nutes, you do have the problem of salt buildup, but that can be flushed out.But I should still pH balance everything right?
excellent reply. +rep.That SHOULD do it for you, just stick to the program and don't obsess or freak out at every little "hangnail" the plants exhibit. Most people end up in trouble because they immediately FREAK when a leaf isn't quite as green today as it was yesterday, or a leaf starts curling a bit. They hit the forums and get 7 or 8 different diagnoses and they try all of the remedies. Instant soil and nute overload. Just take things easy and you'll be just fine.
haha pretty damn closeIf the pH of your water is at 8, then yes by all means correct that down to about 6.8 or so. Man, thats pretty high. You gotta be in either AZ, Nevada, or New Mexico.
i have used this pen and so has two of my friends. my pen seemed to work great for about a year....ph accuracy was always fair. i bought calibration solution and kept it calibrated. after a few days it would fall out of accuracy by a few points. the trick to ph pens is to keep em stored in a solution....you got to keep them moist. this pen is worth the money but if accuracy is your deal spend more money. marijuana can take a wide range of ph fluctuations in soil and hydro. hydro seems a bit more sensitive when it comes to ph tho...i would recommend this pen for soil but if doing hydro you may want to invest a bit more money.
a great closet grower tool. the pen still works but i invested in a more expensive one.