IN33DW33D
Active Member
I like the way you think, but it doesn't work like that.Trolling eh?
How would you define trolling?
I did start this thread afterall
As far as I understand it would be pretty hard to troll my own thread, and I invited ievolution into this thread so that he could take a look at my theory and give his input
BTW I am not ievolution and if you take a look at our grows you will see that.
Here's your post that you supposedly schooled me with-
"Soils retain water that can dissolve a range of molecules and ions. These solutions exchange gases with the soil atmosphere, contain dissolved sugars, fulvic acids and other organic acids, plant nutrients such as nitrate, ammonium, potassium, phosphate, sulfate and calcium, and micronutrients such as zinc, iron and copper. These nutrients are exchanged with the mineral and humiccomponent, that retains them in its ionic state, by adsorption. Some arid soils have sodium solutions that greatly impact plant growth. Soil pH can affect the type and amount of anions and cations that soil solutions contain and that be exchanged between the soil substrate and biological organisms."
There is definately some good info on wikipedia, but as far as showing me the flaw in my theory, this doesn't work.
All of those characteristics could easily be describing a coco-coir medium being fed with salt based nutrients
There is nothing in that description that is specific to soil
your post that you are so proud of is a complete fail(or full of retard as you put it)
Hey check out my grow btw I'm growing in coco.. let me describe my coco medium to you a bit-
My coco medium retains water that can dissolve a range of molecules and ions. These solutions exchange gases with the coco medium atmosphere, contain dissolved sugars, fulvic acids and other organic acids(I also use humic acid), plant nutrients such as nitrate, ammonium, potassium, phosphate, sulfate and calcium, and micronutrients such as zinc, iron and copper. These nutrients are exchanged with the mineral and humic component, that retains them in its ionic state, by adsorption. Some arid arid coco mediums have sodium solutions that greatly impact plant growth. Coco pH can affect the type and amount of anions and cations that coco solutions contain and that be exchanged between the coco substrate and biological organisms."
[h=3]Botanical[/h]Coco peat is used as a soil additive. Due to low levels of nutrients in its composition, coco peat is usually not the sole component in the medium used to grow plants. When plants are grown exclusively in coco peat, it is important to add nutrients according to the specific plants' needs. Coco peat from Sri Lanka and India contains several macro- and micro-plant nutrients, including substantial quantities of potassium.
Coco peat is not fully decomposed when it arrives and will use up available nitrogen as it does so (known as drawdown), competing with the plant if there is not enough. Poorly sourced coco peat can have excess salts in it and needs washing (check electrical conductivity of run-off water, flush if high). It has a similar cation exchange capacity to sphagnum peat, holds water well, re-wets well from dry and holds around 1000 times more air than soil.
Common uses of coco peat include:
- As a substitute for peat, because it is free of bacteria and most fungal spores, and is sustainably produced without the environmental damage caused by peat mining.
- Mixed with sand, compost and fertilizer to make good quality potting soil. Coco peat generally has an acidity in the range of pH - 5.5 to 6.5. It is a little on the acidic side for some plants, but many popular plants can tolerate this pH range.
- As substrate for growing mushrooms, which thrive on the cellulose. Coco peat has high cellulose and lignin content.