JimmiP
Well-Known Member
If it's in the ground you would not be able to flush the available nitrogen away. And the plant in the ground would grow, mature and be ready for harvesting in it's own time. You can't really, "flush" it all away from the medium (unless it's some type of hydro) in containers either. The nitrogen is still there. All.of the other nutrients that were present are still there too. You will dilute them and inhibit the plants ability to use them by inundating them with water. But you can't wash them all away.
Here's the score with the plant taking nutrition it has stored in the leaves back out. They do it because there's not enough left for them to use in the soil or other medium they are growing in, the leaves are old and/ or shadowed out (which new people always seem to worry about), you have over fed and pissed the plant off,, or the plant has decided it is time to use them because it's nearing the end of its life cycle. The last reason being the way I personally believe is the way it should be allowed to be.
My plants always have enough nutrition in the soil they live and die in. After a plant is harvested, I can just drop another plant in the same soil and it will grow just fine. It may not do quite as well without amending the soil a little, but it will complete its life cycle.
I let the plants keep going until they are done. And they, not me,, decide when that is.
That is not to say I don't give my plants a little extra at certain times, I do. But I grow in some pretty rich soil to begin with and I don't try to upend nature buy drowning my plants roots because I want them to be, or think they should be done. I just keep feeding the soil and watering as normal until the plants are ready.
These plants used the stored nutrition in there leaves before I harvested them.
I didn't force them too... They had a plan that is older than humanity and knew what to do without anyone else forcing them too.
Besides they aren't just taking in raw fertilizer and parking it in different parts of themselves. They metabolize everything they take in just as every other organism on earth, dose with what they consume. If there were (God forbid) heavy metals in what they had to work with, there will be some amount of heavy metals in the plant near harvest. And dumping water through the root zone won't wash the heavy metals back out of the plant tissue. You can dump water on the plant to the point of killing it. But the heavy metals will still be in that plant material after it's dead.
Instead of people trying to wash away what they have overdone, maybe they should just not try to do as much.
And honestly, why is anyone using any substance to grow a plant they intend to consume that would have to be removed to make it taste better or even safe to ingest? Maybe it's greed....maybe it's gullibility.... maybe it's just some misguided herd mentality. I don't know.
I do agree with not giving supplements to plants near the end of flower. A couple of weeks before the grower thinks they ought to be done just give them the water they need and let them do the rest.
In the end each person is growing their own plants and will do what they want with them. But the plant is going to do what it does too. It's already done it. And drowning the plant won't help fix the growers mistakes.
Good luck friends!
Here's the score with the plant taking nutrition it has stored in the leaves back out. They do it because there's not enough left for them to use in the soil or other medium they are growing in, the leaves are old and/ or shadowed out (which new people always seem to worry about), you have over fed and pissed the plant off,, or the plant has decided it is time to use them because it's nearing the end of its life cycle. The last reason being the way I personally believe is the way it should be allowed to be.
My plants always have enough nutrition in the soil they live and die in. After a plant is harvested, I can just drop another plant in the same soil and it will grow just fine. It may not do quite as well without amending the soil a little, but it will complete its life cycle.
I let the plants keep going until they are done. And they, not me,, decide when that is.
That is not to say I don't give my plants a little extra at certain times, I do. But I grow in some pretty rich soil to begin with and I don't try to upend nature buy drowning my plants roots because I want them to be, or think they should be done. I just keep feeding the soil and watering as normal until the plants are ready.
These plants used the stored nutrition in there leaves before I harvested them.
I didn't force them too... They had a plan that is older than humanity and knew what to do without anyone else forcing them too.
Besides they aren't just taking in raw fertilizer and parking it in different parts of themselves. They metabolize everything they take in just as every other organism on earth, dose with what they consume. If there were (God forbid) heavy metals in what they had to work with, there will be some amount of heavy metals in the plant near harvest. And dumping water through the root zone won't wash the heavy metals back out of the plant tissue. You can dump water on the plant to the point of killing it. But the heavy metals will still be in that plant material after it's dead.
Instead of people trying to wash away what they have overdone, maybe they should just not try to do as much.
And honestly, why is anyone using any substance to grow a plant they intend to consume that would have to be removed to make it taste better or even safe to ingest? Maybe it's greed....maybe it's gullibility.... maybe it's just some misguided herd mentality. I don't know.
I do agree with not giving supplements to plants near the end of flower. A couple of weeks before the grower thinks they ought to be done just give them the water they need and let them do the rest.
In the end each person is growing their own plants and will do what they want with them. But the plant is going to do what it does too. It's already done it. And drowning the plant won't help fix the growers mistakes.
Good luck friends!
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