Good answer. I've had great results with it, both as a "seed starter" and using it to cut high-nute soils down to something gentler for sensitive strains.I use the seed starting mix and it works great. It's only 5-1-5 compared to the 21-7-14 of most of the soils (organic is 10-5-10). The only problems I've had were a direct result of my newbie watering mistakes. I mix it 4:1 with perlite for more drainage.
The OP is talking seed starter - that's a diff product than MG Organic.Idk man I tried the miracle grow organics a few years back for my first grow, And it really messed my plants up. It was great for starting them, But if you choose to use it just plan on moving it to better soil later on.....that's my suggestion at least.
hey Kriegs,Good answer. I've had great results with it, both as a "seed starter" and using it to cut high-nute soils down to something gentler for sensitive strains.
Adding perlite is a very good idea, though - it will pack down on you.
Yeah.. last year, I went straight MG pre-ferted potting soil start to finish. Worked out okay, but would've been better had I put a little more creativity into it.hey Kriegs,
On my next grow I believe I'm going to put 2 or 3 plants in MG Organic (with extra perlite and some vermiculite) with that pocket of seed starting mix like you're doing. I like the sound of that idea.
I started out learning to grow in nothing but that regular MG potting soil. And while they were far from being the best grows I've had I now know that there were lots of other things that I didn't have dialed in as best I could.
While I'm not going to claim that MG potting soils are the best thing you can grow in I've got a sneaky suspecion that a lot of the folks who have strong opinions against it; because they got bad results with it, were probably making some other serious mistakes that the soil had nothing to do with.
I totally agree with you that the MG potting soils do need some more perlite in them because they do tend to pack down a little to tight by the end of a grow.
Jack
Kriegs,Yeah.. last year, I went straight MG pre-ferted potting soil start to finish. Worked out okay, but would've been better had I put a little more creativity into it.
A lot of people hate MG because it's a mega-corporation, not because of results (can't talk them down). Those who quibble with it on results just aren't thinking thru the needs of the plant at different stages, or have other issues (incorrect watering, lighting, temps, etc) that they pin on the soil instead. That has included me at times.
One thing: forget the "pocket" idea I suggested earlier. The roots grow past that in a couple, few days. I would also skip the vermiculite -- it holds water, and conflicts with the purpose of perlite (drainage). The MG pre-fert potting soil ("feeds for 3 months" stuff) is the only product in their line that I think has enough perlite / drainage right out of the bag.
MG pre-fert, MGO and the seed starter are all great products. You just have to think about what is overkill, and what is missing in each. The pre-fert soils are too strong for most MJ in early growth. My superskunks didn't like it at all early on, but loved it once they grew out a bit. Next time around, I mixed up a 40/40/20 MG seed starter/MGO/ perlite mix and they just went apeshit - loved it (that's what I'd recommend starting seeds in). I then transplated into the mix I described just one post ago - a little stronger. Now, they're loving that.
It's great stuff, it's cheap, and effective. I've done a lot of playing around with their different products this time around, and I'm finding some very effective mixes for diff plant stages (check link for details, photos, etc.).
Well, I'd take UB's word over mine any time. I guess I'd think about it in terms of how you manage your plants. If you have to travel or can't see them daily sometimes, some extra water holding might be handy. As long as you add it sparingly - that's where I've seen problems.Kriegs,
A couple months back UB posted a recommendation for a potting soil mix that I went with this time. It contained equal parts of both perlite and vermiculite. And I've gotta say I'm really likeing both it's drainage and water holding characteristics.
At the time I made this mix up I did some reading up on vermiculite in Wikipedia. The big thing about it that I recall was that it was suppose to help with cation exchange in the root zone.
Being as you're a lab rat you probably have a better understanding of what all that means than I do. If you get a chance to give that a read please let me know what you think about it.
Jack