Does it have a nutrient charge, and if so what is it? Most potting soils do.
I assume so, and I am waiting on the response from Fox Farm for that specific information. I do know that it contains a lot of organic products, which if I understand correctly, it would be hard to get nutrient burning, especially from a pre-mix, but who knows. The main components are earthworm castings, mycorrhizae (as well as various beneficial bacteria's), bat guano, and humic acid. Not sure if this matters...
Sorry my friend, doesn't mean a thing to me. You apply foods according to plants' requirements, not some recommendation on a label. You also apply foods based on certain ratios dependent on what you're trying to accomplish. IOW, promoting foliage requires a higher N ratio than say....a 1-3-2.
Hehe, I'm sure it doesn't and I apologize if I didn't give more useful information, however I wanted to provide you as much as possible in hopes that you could aid in diagnosing my current problem, and I truly appreciate your help. I would like to clarify what your saying: So, when you add nutrients you do so in a reactive manner, rather than proactive, according to how your plants are growing, and what they're 'telling you' based on observation? Otherwise, I wouldn't necessarily know what specific requirements the plant needs, other than the generalized guideline on the back of the bottle. I guess you are insinuating that I should know what exactly is going into my plants by adding individual components rather than a pre-mixed nutrient made by a corporation? Also, I would love to accomplish all of the things that make for a successful grow, including promoting foliage, larger roots, healthier, fuller plants, larger yields, etc. Could you give me some insight as to how to do this?... Or more specifically, what do you use to feed, in general, and what processes do these involve when taking into consideration feed schedule, etc.
1. Increase the temp, go for a 15F differential day/night.
2. Plants need a rest. Recommend a 20/4 for veg.
3. Can't comment on the lighting as I don't know what your plants are actually receiving regarding f.c.
I appreciate the recommendations, and I have implemented both, as of today.
Sounds good. Good air movement is necessary to keep disease pressures at bay, especially during flowering.
Can too much fan be a problem? IOW, is is a bad thing to keep the fan on the plants consistently, w/o oscillation?
Last, do you use CO2? Is it a bad thing to use CO2 in an environment that will receive very little 'new air', due to lack of ventilation?
And are you aware if supercropping stunts a plant?
UB, again, thank you, I appreciate your time.... Now if I can only get some Meds!
Dry for over a month now
Cheers!