Why?
How does what I post affect you? You're obviously highly intelligent. More so than most. So I don't understand why you would waste time worrying about some post I made about the evils I perceive to be rampant in the cannabis industry. That's just my opinion. People can take it or leave it. I'm not targeting specific companies. I'm not pointing fingers here and there. I'm just generalizing what I see occurring. If you disagree that's fine. But telling me to stop voicing my opinion? That's not something I'm willing to do.
So if my posts are not for your liking then just skip over them and smoke another bowl because I understand that you don't like me. For whatever reason I don't care. So you go your way and I'll go mine. No animosity here.
It really doesn't matter what OUR favorite nutrient line is. The plants just want certain things and if you provide those in the right amounts you'll keep the plant happy and healthy.
This is what the plants favorite line is:
Macro Nutrients
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Potassium
Micro Nutrients
Zinc (Zn)
Manganese (Mn)
Iron (Fe)
Boron (B)
Chlorine (Cl) "Yes chlorine is a micronutrient needed by cannabis plants"
Cobalt (Co)
Copper (Cu)
Molybdenum (Mb)
Silicon (Si)
Nickel (Ni)
Sodium (Na)
Secondary Nutrients
Magnesium (Mg)
Calcium (Ca)
Sulfur (S)
Other elements used by the plant that are present in air and water
Carbon (C)
Oxygen (O)
Hydrogen (H)
I just want to know how adding plants back to the same soil it grew in adds more K than was originally there before growing anything. Knowing that plants do not sequester K from the air, I really question that assertion. I don't think I'm adding more K than the plants removed by recycling what grew before, but I guess opinions differ.. Otherwise I could be in a situation where in each cycle, I add more K than was used by the plants if using alternative concentrated amendments which may affect me down the road. Plus organic material feeds the life in my soil. If it weren't added, what the heck are the bacteria, protozoans, worms, etc. gonna eat?
I did mention "healthy" cannabis plants for recycling material in my post you quoted. Obviously using unhealthy plants that lack a specific nutrient aren't going to address any deficiency in that nutrient. Common sense. Nature works by recycling and the mineralization of elements bound to complex organic molecules. Nitrogen, calcium, potash, potassium, magnesium, etc. all have their own cycles and the co-evolution of plants with fungi, bacteria, and a host of other organisms has made this possible. To me this is the "root" of organic growing - feed the soil, not the plants.
No idea what you're talking about with the mineralization of N and the eventual toxic formation of Nitrates as a result from just adding organic material as a mulch. Heck, some people even compost organic material and apply it directly to their soil! The reality is that most of the NH4+ that protozoans release after eating bacteria are intercepted by other bacteria. You need to watch the C:N ratio of whatever you add as organic material. Obviously 1" mulch of fresh chicken manure would be a bad idea, but serious... you suggest cannabis leaves will lead to a N toxicity condition? Seriously?
"One of the reasons I recycle is because I'm scared to death of having too much K build up in my soil. Recycling is a way of knowing that you're only adding that which was removed in the first place" Soil testing/sap testing is THE WAY to know your K situation. You're trying to tell me you know your K levels by recycling? "seriously" ? Without a test you're guessing. "scared to death"? Bro assuage your fears with data. Are you thinking that a steady K level from sprout to chop is best practice? It's not.
"It's the way nature works" no, you're mistaken. A grow room, a farm or a greenhouse isn't nature, it's a manipulated production based environment. A forest is how how nature works.
the root of "organic growing" "seriously"? That term is meaningless.
"Obviously using unhealthy plants that lack a specific nutrient aren't going to address any deficiency in that nutrient. Common sense."
To me, common sense would mean you posted up data showing balanced soil and mineral sufficiency. Instead you argue as if farming best practices follow your thinking. They don't. No farmer considers his stubble "absolute best" nutrition nor does any successful farmer imagine that it will supply the correct complement of nutrients for successive crops. Any nutrient deficiency or imbalance will be magnified by continuous incorporation of post harvest plant materials.
"No idea what you're talking about with the mineralization of N" I can see that. Do you know you plant nitrate levels by "recycling" lol. Sorry that's not possible. "
The reality is that most of the NH4+ that protozoans release after eating bacteria are intercepted by other bacteria." By "the reality" you mean your simple beliefs. Do you have a biological assay of your substrate? Please put up your soil test showing super low nitrate or your sap test showing super low nitrate. "The reality" is that many growers have nitrate out the ass in soil and in plant sap. A good indication that nitrate is a ubiquitous problem is the endless discussion of spider mite solutions and other sap sucking insect concerns.
" but serious... you suggest cannabis leaves will lead to a N toxicity condition? Seriously?" LOL, the ellipsis is straight jackassery.
I'm not suggesting. I'm stating that over supplying nitrate to smaller or any plants that cannot convert it rapidly enough into amino N will result in plants with high nitrate inviting other deficiencies, insects and disease. This is basic botany. A plant's nutritional needs are not static over the course of a grow.
If you believe that substrate K or NO4 at 2 weeks should be the same or lower than a 6 week old or flowering plant then there is good news, you have a huge opportunity to improve your flowers.