ProdigalSun
Well-Known Member
I was able to PM admin for the sticky request, but potroast doesn't seem to be taking PMs now, I couldn't find the correct icon.
Good point, it's very confusing and will make a neurotic out of you. I've explored the pH effects of various salts like urea vs nitrates and tried different "stuff". Now I just don't worry about it anymore and the plants are going nuts. I'm not growing cannabis any more at least haven't for a year or two due to security issues, but I am growing tropical fruit trees. My soil mix is about as scientific as tossing a coin in the air and hoping it comes up heads, BUT, I know what basics to start with and end up where I want to go. Depending on what I have around here I will or might use horse manure, compost, builders sand, coarse vermiculite, dolomite, peat, pine bark mulch and mix it up in bulk using the bucket of my tractor to scoop from this pile and that. Add to that bone and blood meal, muriate of potash, alfalfa meal, etc. What's been a real treat is the use of Polyon, a 12 month slow release food and yes, I've found that cannabis does extremely well regarding bud production with a high N food used exclusively. Here's the label -Now it would seem to me, depending on your water source, that while using a peat based mix your best bet would be a fertilizer make up with more nitrate nitrogen (GH Maxi series...etc) because it tends to help along with the lime balance out the acidity of the peat. But again you need to balance that against the water quality and the alkalinity content. Yes it all gets very confusing.
Based on his position he's chosen to not be pestured.I was able to PM admin for the sticky request, but potroast doesn't seem to be taking PMs now, I couldn't find the correct icon.
I use DynaGro Foliage Pro, I used to use Dynagro Grow. I've grown many great plants with my tap. They look, smell and taste great. My RO grown plants just burn better and burn to a white ash. The thing that sucks is that I get deficiencies sometimes with the RO water unless I use Protekt to raise the ph (at least doing that prevents the problems).It's the total salts that is the issue. The application of ultra hard water without any plant food can burn roots and induce the common symptoms of high salts over time - leaf tip burn, margin burn and/or cupping. See my Plant Moisture sticky in Plant Problems. If I want to push my plants with plant food I always use rain water. You want to start off with a water source that has little to no salts, and rainwater is the perfect solution. There's a reason why plants love it....it's all they've known. I recently installed a rainwater collection system on both the house and greenhouse. A greenhouse gutter drops into a 305 gal. tank and a cheap 120V Wayne pump is used to deliver water to my tropicals using a convenient water hose. Thinking about installing a Dosatron for salts injection.
BTW, 10 grains is considered "hard" by TX A&M. What's your primary salts?
UB
More N?.......Hey Ben,
I just made a post that will certainly get some ph adjustment advice. Maybe you can give me some input. https://www.rollitup.org/marijuana-plant-problems/748823-please-help-3rd-post-trying.html
I'm not 100% certain, but I think measuring the pH of organics is not always accurate - could be wrong on that, though. Regardless, I personally classify pure organics as a little different ball game. I know there is some mechanics involved in organics that allows exchange at lower pH too, if I remember correctly. The airier the mix, the less the buffer, too, and the more the pH at the roots is the pH of the nutrient solution. Again, a lot of all of this is based around much less runoff than I promote - that is a big difference with all of this as well.It's not a great explanation by any means, but you said yourself you have dealt with shit in the low 4's without any problems. A lot of the organic bottled fertilizers tend to drop pH readings way the fuck off the charts(low 4's....earth juice), yet because the mix or substrate acting as such a strong buffer it rarely seems to effect the plants ability to process what it needs to grow.
Well, as far as water alkalinity, I don't deal too much with that. To each their own, and I am not criticizing anyone, but my honest opinion is that in 2013, there is no reason to not be using RO water. Those Hydrologic filters can be had pretty cheaply. Let's see here, $500 smart phones that will be outdated in a year, $150.00/month cable/satellite bills, Xboxs, etc. Most weed farmers can prioritize and find the money. It gives you that much more control over your rootzone, which gives you that much more control over your harvest. You take a bottle of whatever nutes you use and dump it into tap water, there are instant chemical reactions occurring. The mfg of that nutrient spent all that time to give you that mix, and you change it, before you ever fertilize with it. The nute mfg didn't use tap water to make those ferts, and if you called tech support complaining that their nutes suck and don't work as advertised, I bet one of their first questions they will ask you is about the quality of water you are using to mix their nutes.There is a combination of things at work here, the type of nitrogen the plants are getting along with the alkalinity of the water source are the two major factors on determining if the overl pH of the substrate go out of the range where the plant can't process the nutrients to grow correctly whether it's orchids or our beloved MJ. Hell even with GH's organic line of fertilizers they tell you the pH of the nutrient mix doesn't need to be regulated.
But the manufacturer of that mix pays close attention to the pH of that mix. I am pretty sure Pro-Mix comes from the mfg in the 5.4-5.9 range. Real close to what I am advocating. I personally have not checked the runoff of many mixes, but I ran a hand mixed PPV, and nothing else but PPV, that was in the low 4's. To tie that in to my point about nutirnet pH, I feel that the more airy and the more runoff you use, the more the substrate pH becomes inmprotant, at all, and the focus, what the roots see is mostly what the nute solution is, in a healthy, vigorous, proper size container.Now, I'm not a hydro grower and never pretended to be one, but I would always check the pH if ebb and flow, DWC..etc was the way I was doing it. But for potted containers with your standard peat mix with a little amendments, I never had to.
I mentioned that in a post before reading this too (I made some claims that took some words to back up). Definitely agree on all of this right here. Add a mini flush with every feed on a good airy mix, and all of that stuff can go out the window, for the most part, and the focus becomes what the pH of the solution you feed with.I also think the time we grow these plants indoors plays a role. Were not talking about a perennial here, these plants are your basic foliage annuals that have a limited life span, and over this short period of time it's hard to really change the substrates pH levels.
Thanks for the welcome. I plan on addressing your post and at least one more from someone, then I'll duck out this thread, for I have littered it enough with my opinions, words and pics. If I cannot manage to lay out my full take on all of this in the space I allotted myself, without asking, in this thread, well, that's my fault. After that, I would just be repeating myself, which is annoying. Plus, I need to get off my ass, get some things taken care of and get resupplied to venture away from civilization and internet connections for a couple weeks with the doggies and my Rocky Mountain Gypsy Rig.Cat Jockey, welcome to RIU and the thread. Nice garden and must say it's refreshing to read text from another who can write proper prose. Having said that, I still maintain that cannabis is very pH tolerant when it comes to those 'essential' elements required for good growth and that's all that matters. Don't care if your plants "see" a pH of 5.0 or 8.2, are they uptaking the proper elements in the proper ratio?
Soil ain't my thang, but I would agree it is a tremendous buffer.Hell, many are buying cheap pH meters, not calibrating with fresh solutions, and correctly measuring the values of their mediums whether that be water culture or soil. The first person to point out that the pH emotionalism is way out of hand was a hydro grower about 15 years ago.
Like I said before, soil is a powerful buffer and it appears the popular trend is to "water my plants with ph'd water". I say, "knock yourself out. Always used chlorinated water and never adjusted my water's pH...and aint about to start now."
Indeed. Perhaps I sense a shared disdain for pollen chuckers with 3000 watt grows labeling themselves as breeders and charging a bazillon dollars for a, umm, strain that might just help dilute the true genetics over the course of time, if they take over the entire seed supply business?Yes, isn't my first rodeo. Probably have about 50K posts under my belt in about 8 forums, most defunct, and that includes the old encrypted chained servers posting on non image Newsgroups years ago - ADPC. Modded the first real cannabis forum cannabis.com aka Marihemp and then OG, CW, etc. followed. Like the hundreds of seed chuckers claiming to have invented the Holy Grail, there's a hundred grow forums, and they're all about the same.
Uncle Ben
I'm considering using RO Water instead of my tap as all my experiments trying to get my 200-220ppm tap water to not destroy my garden fail. Declorinating , vinegar, sulfuric acid ph down, nothing worksMy tap is 10 grains hardness and has total alkalinity between 60-80 Uncle Ben. My TDS pen shows between 180-220 ppm when I check it. I use RO water now and it has improved the way the plants burn. Anyone care to break down the science on this? My medium is Sunshine4 bales.