Nute brands

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Well put mate :)
But i did look into going powder possibilty a long time ago and decided that wasn't something i wanted to try at this stage. Maybe someday. But ye its true the availability just isn't there where i come from. I will get only pre mixed powders for all sorts of other purposes, i looked more than once considering that possibility myself.

Like i said before i DO agree with everything you said. But even if the powder ferts were readily available i'd prolly still wanna pay the few bucks more for a good formula.

I do foliar feed quite alot, using silica as one of the foliar applications ;)

And lastly, the admin that erased my reply to the troll above?? Wtf? HE can talk shit but i can't reply???
Yes they play favorites here. Best to put the trolls on ignore. I don't have time for morons, anyway. Who does?

Having run head to head vs sexy bottles, I can say early results are that the water bottles are more expensive. Yield isn't substantially different, bigger or better quality. They're just less flexible...
 

listmann

Well-Known Member
Ye i kno :) and you definelty have got me thinking! The nutes don't need to get much more expensive before i do take your advice and start lookin into dry chemicals again. I should be able to find something usefull SOME where ;)
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
Ye i kno :) and you definelty have got me thinking! The nutes don't need to get much more expensive before i do take your advice and start lookin into dry chemicals again. I should be able to find something usefull SOME where ;)
If you are stuck in the EU, there are restrictions as to the ferts used, as HG has N.American nutes only, and EU nutes. If I was there (GB?) I would use HG, expensive but good quality, plus they make soil and hydro products which is nice.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Ye i kno :) and you definelty have got me thinking! The nutes don't need to get much more expensive before i do take your advice and start lookin into dry chemicals again. I should be able to find something usefull SOME where ;)
Try wholesale greenhouse or agricultural supply houses. Emphasis on wholesale, they do it to keep the riff raff (us) to a minimum.
 

listmann

Well-Known Member
If you are stuck in the EU, there are restrictions as to the ferts used, as HG has N.American nutes only, and EU nutes. If I was there (GB?) I would use HG, expensive but good quality, plus they make soil and hydro products which is nice.
Thx. I'll look into it. Nooo it's waay worse, denmark! Alotta product i CAN find in the UK they don't ship here

Exactly tty, they do it to keep the riff raff to a minimum. Wich is also why i'm not good at showing up at places lile that on my bold face and start asking questions :lol:
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Ye i kno :) and you definelty have got me thinking! The nutes don't need to get much more expensive before i do take your advice and start lookin into dry chemicals again. I should be able to find something usefull SOME where ;)
I'm not sure where all I've posted this, so it may seem redundant; I recently ran a head to head of dry nutrient salts (Hydrogardens.com's 5-11-26 plus micros, calcium nitrate, epsom salt and MKP) vs House & Garden on their own published RDWC chart.

H&G lost. The run was clearly less dense and the plants were obviously starved for nutrients.

Surely tweaking the EC chart from H&G might make up for these deficiencies- but why bother? The outcome would just end up matching- at best- results from the dry salts, for the low price of twenty to fifty times as expensive?!
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Thx. I'll look into it. Nooo it's waay worse, denmark! Alotta product i CAN find in the UK they don't ship here

Exactly tty, they do it to keep the riff raff to a minimum. Wich is also why i'm not good at showing up at places lile that on my bold face and start asking questions :lol:
The wholesalers do it to maintain the competitive advantage of commercial greenhouse operators; they know that high priced nutrients make it harder for home growers to compete- for any products grown.
 
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