GOLDBERG71
Well-Known Member
Yes hydrated lime.Calcium sulfate dihydrate,is the one you are thinking of maybe besides dolomite also known as gypsum.There is also hydrated lime but thats potent stuff.
Yes hydrated lime.Calcium sulfate dihydrate,is the one you are thinking of maybe besides dolomite also known as gypsum.There is also hydrated lime but thats potent stuff.
I can't tell you a thing about that soil. What I can tell you is that I make my nutes at a PH of 6.5 PERIOD and I don't add ANYTHING other than perlite to my pro mix. I can't see anything wrong with your plant. But I'm using my phone. If this is your first grow I'd suggest adjusting to 6.5 and sticking with it. Most soils are made so you don't need to adjust them. If your plants are showing signs of a problem I'd start with the nutrient levels and assume the PH is fine. Unless you believe it's a soil PH problem. Like I said before the only home test is a quality soil meter. The other method is collecting soil and taking to a state agency or college to get tested and they'll break it down and tell you exactly what to amend it with NEXT time. But that won't help you this cycle. Now if you've been feeding at a different PH you're in a position where you now have more possible causes to your problem. Which makes it harder to figure out. Because when the soil PH gets to far from acceptable range the soil will lockup. That means that even though the nutrients the plant needs are in the soil they AREN'T available to the plant. Beginning signs of this are close to a nitrogen deficiency. This is why I pay attention to details like PH. It makes it much easier to diagnose problems.Oh? Right? Damn?! I'm in biobizz light mix sorry! I read runoff should b 6.5-6.8 also so was panicking! I feel like a bit of an ahole now lol. Maybe just give them all light flush 6.5 next water? This pic was bout week & half ago:View attachment 3614229
So are you saying that you've mixed the same nutes at the same rates for a long enough period time that you know you're ending up with a PH near 6.5. Or are you saying you're using nutrients that are off by a point or so and you're still having great results. Or are you adding a buffer to your soil. I feel like you're leaving something out here. Because it might work short term but long term that sounds like a disaster waiting to show its face.
My well water changes with the seasons (EC, PH), and it's caught me off guard a few times (hydro). As for dirt it's pretty much left alone to do its thing and no salt based nutes.I'm saying I used to be anal retentive about the whole deal, then i stopped measuring pH, and the shit hasn't hit the fan yet.
My well water is 0.8ec, 7.4pH if i recall correctly. At the most, I mix about one teaspoon of maxsea per gallon of well water, which used to.get to around 2.0ec, including the well water, and pH around 6.8ish. Thats it. My nutes dont have cal or mag, my well water has got enough. My medium is promix. Sometimes i add ewc or compost but the last few batches the compost was frozen so just promix, well water, and maxsea. If i remember i'll do a handful of gypsum or oyster shell meal but i'm positive my last batches are only promix hp.
When i did hydro, i didnt check pH after a while either. I would mix my nutes at a specific ratio, then titrate until my meter read 1000ppm. That'd set the pH right where it needed to be... I was using GH flora series, only the bases.
Maybe i'm lucky, and i'm feeding a higher pH to a medium thats known to be acidic, and between that and my wet/dry cycles i'm riding the line?
I live life on the wild side, my blu lab combo meter is collecting dust in it's box
Somebody has a sick looking plant and they check the ppm and ph of their soil runoff and they are 2000 and 7.0. I would have a pretty good idea of what is wrong with their plant without knowing anything else. It is an easy thing to check and can certainly provide some directional information on the issue(s). Your mileage may vary.Testing run off is pointless as I've stated. What good does reading something that you can't quantify what it's come in contact with? Unless you mixed your own soil you would be guessing. I can't tell you how much lime or other material the run off has come in contact with? How do you quantify the remaining nutrients that are in the run off from the previous feeding. And how does that effect the run off?
So mix 2 tbl spoons dolomite per gallon and add to each plant I have 4 in 11l pots. Some say soil ph doesn't matter some say it does? Bit confused. Just not sure what to do. I Thot if I added ph6.5 every watering the runoff wud b close I see some saying runoff doesn't matter. I would like the soil to be correct ph if I can. Just bit of a noob. Worth getting a soil ph tester? Won't be here for days. Just flush 1/2 strength with ph6.5 & all should be good or use the dolomite? I just ain't sure. Sorry for the hassle guys. Just want full potential as u can understand.A quick comment since you already have the dolomite.
2Tbl/gallon of mix (~4 liters?) applied as a top dress (scratched into the surface if you can), will take care of your pH with regular waterings. Give it about two weeks to start having an effect and next time, add it to the mix @1cup/cf.
The other nutes it contains is Mg. Sorta covers Cal/Mag issues all in one shot. Pretty simple, no?
It will get your soil pH to ~6.8 and bring any liquids to that pH. Liquids only affect pH as they are passing through the soil. The soil's pH controls everything.
HTH
Wet
Damn I just bought a soil tester! Thanks so much dude I really appreciate taking the time to help! I don't know how messed up my soil is as I've been wedding ph6.5-6.8 from the start. Just the runoff worried me. I shall flush each 11l pot twice the volume water? Thanks man. Maybe I looked too much into the runoff? Just panicked!The lime takes a good long time to break down and do some good in the soil. That's why you apply it early- to give it a chance over time to be useful. Adding it with each watering is less helpful, but better than nothing. If your soil is messed up as we speak, do a thorough flushing with slightly fertilized water, ph around 6.3-6.4. Give the plants a chance to dry out well, than continue with the above plan. Forget the soil ph testers, they don't work and are a waste of money. In twenty plus years of growing, I have never tested the runoff of water out of my pots. EVER! Under fertilize too and slowly build it back up. Unhealthy plants don't need a high dose of fertilizer they can't use. So start low, and build up as they become healthier.
SSHZ is pretty much spot on with the pro mix, lime and perlite.So mix 2 tbl spoons dolomite per gallon and add to each plant I have 4 in 11l pots. Some say soil ph doesn't matter some say it does? Bit confused. Just not sure what to do. I Thot if I added ph6.5 every watering the runoff wud b close I see some saying runoff doesn't matter. I would like the soil to be correct ph if I can. Just bit of a noob. Worth getting a soil ph tester? Won't be here for days. Just flush 1/2 strength with ph6.5 & all should be good or use the dolomite? I just ain't sure. Sorry for the hassle guys. Just want full potential as u can understand.
Big help! Thanks dude! I use biobizz light and bout 30% perlite. Grow 4 at a time so I'll just add lime to each mix when transplanting or just initial soil? Sorry for being a pain I'm just keen to learn more and more. I want quality not settle for "its ok"! Thanks againSSHZ is pretty much spot on with the pro mix, lime and perlite.
I've never used pro mix, or any bagged soil for that matter. It simply did not exist when I was taught how to make a mix from scratch (1972). However, Premier brand peat moss (makers of pro mix), did and have been using it for over 40 years.
pH is VERY important in soil and anyone who says otherwise is a fool. It is also extremely easy to get right from the start and stay right for the entire grow. Simply add the 1cup/cf of mix and put it out of your mind. No pH'ng anything going in or, checking pH. Simply a non issue.
I'm doing organics now, but did chems for 30+ years. Both with the same mix, pretty much what SSHZ detailed with the pro mix. Lime was always added no matter what the nutrient source. For me, it is the second thing added after the peat moss in the wheelbarrow, followed by whatever else is going in there. Perlite is last along with water to wet it all down and get stuff working.
Adding it before use is by far the best, but the top dressing of 2tbl/gal of mix will provide some benefit. Way more than not adding any. BTW, just a single top dressing, don't keep adding more. One application/grow is usually all that's needed. If you reuse your soil, you can add more when you reamend before the next grow.
Soil pH testers that actually work start at ~$200, so if you got one of those $10 testers it is worse than useless due to inaccurate readings. Do not trust it in the least.
Hope some of this helps.
Wet
My first guess would be lack of N for plants that start to show yellowish leaves. Unless you've gone so far off track you've caused soil problems. So I'd suggest adding a little more N to your solution as well as adjusting the PH to 6.5 after mixing but before applying. At some point you're going to have to choose who to believe. Finding someone who uses your soil would be helpful.The plants were looking yellowing that's why I
Damn I just bought a soil tester! Thanks so much dude I really appreciate taking the time to help! I don't know how messed up my soil is as I've been wedding ph6.5-6.8 from the start. Just the runoff worried me. I shall flush each 11l pot twice the volume water? Thanks man. Maybe I looked too much into the runoff? Just panicked!
Not doing organic are we?It's important in either situation but there's much more "wiggle" room with soil. Mistakes in hydro show themselves quickly and can do damage just as fast. Where as mistakes in soil have the aid of soil buffing. None the less properly maintained soil will out preform non maintained soil. My bloom mix at full strength late in flower is about 5.3 without correcting. I WOULDN'T DARE POUR THAT ON MY SOIL. Conversely with one of my grow nutrients reads 7.6 prior to correcting. I WOULDN'T DARE PUT THAT ON MY SOIL EITHER. I just figure if I'm going to put the time money and effort into something I'm going to do it to the best of my ability. PH adjusting the nutrients is way to easy to skip that step. There's only one thing that might be more important than making sure your plant can easily get food and that's making sure it gets enough light.
HOLD IT! NOT a good idea to use hydrated lime!!! Too strong and easy to screw the pooch FAST with it!....I'd stick with your wood ash - and be careful with that too! It's easier to add more then to have to back off with damaged plants!!!!Yes hydrated lime.