sniklefritzz
New Member
only newbs use miracle grow
I believe it takes a greater lacking of that same knowledge to deem it necessary to purchase overpriced, "specialized" nutes from grow shops (online or otherwise). I can make a plant grow beautifully with Miracle Grow. Don't hate me because you can't. When in doubt, throw some more money at it.I believe the name 'Miracle Grow' has more influence on consumers with a limited or complete lack of agricultural and botanical knowledge than any other single factor. It stimulates the instant gratification desire so predominate in many individuals.
I believe it takes a greater lacking of that same knowledge to deem it necessary to purchase overpriced, "specialized" nutes from grow shops (online or otherwise). I can make a plant grow beautifully with Miracle Grow. Don't hate me because you can't. When in doubt, throw some more money at it.
Pretty subjective comparison. Were they the same strain? Veg'd the same ammount of time? What about environmental conditions? I mean I've pulled a pound a plant or more with MG outside, but there's no way I'd expect that indoors with any fert.Fair enough. But I do believe I saw 13 plants, each about 2.5 to 3' tall, harvested last night that used Technaflora nutes. Those 13 together MIGHT have produced as much weight as my ONE miracle grow plant.
EXACT same strain and genetics. Different lighting conditions, room, etc. but my point is - spending extra money on nutrients isn't necessarily going to give you an advantage over the guy who uses MG nutes AND KNOWS WHAT HE IS DOING. You can "get what you pay for" all day long...I'd rather pay less, know what I'm doing, and get better results because I'm not some idiot following a feeding chart.Pretty subjective comparison. Were they the same strain? Veg'd the same ammount of time? What about environmental conditions? I mean I've pulled a pound a plant or more with MG outside, but there's no way I'd expect that indoors with any fert.
I agree with your other statement though, most people don't understand why MG has problems. What's funniest though. Is when they knock it and move to weaker soluble fertilizer, with the same inherent problems.
if your trying to tell me thatIn an organic forum where growing concentrates on cultivation in a living soil without aftermarket nutrients, that amounts to nothing but ridiculous, off-topic chatter. About the same level of discussion as a tug boat captain posting in a sailing forum.
Time to unsubscribe from this thread.
Take your childish anger elsewhere and do a little research with the energy. There are organic cannabis forums where organic grow medium and tea component construction are the major subjects. In organic growing, indoor and outdoor, nutrient components are part of the grow medium where microbes deliver plant requirements. 'Additives' are AACT or ACT brewed teas, applied as drenches and foliar sprays, normally applied once during vegetation and again during early flowering, to enhance microbe numbers/types and activity with little nutrient content. Do yourself a big favor and read Teaming with Microbes. You'll learn how living soil actually functions in servicing plant requirements.if your trying to tell me that
indoor organic soil growers, are not adding any nutes to the soil from seed to harvest ........
yuck fou thats ridiculous
Excellent. I'd add the propensity of chemical (and some organic delivery methods) fertilizers to clog soil with salt deposits, destroying microorganisms, and for all practical purposes it becomes, dead.Plants don't recognize the difference between organic fertilizers and chemical fertilizers. Their tiny root hairs will absorb those microscopic nutrients regardless of the source or how they were manufactured. The biggest differences between organic and chemical fertilizers are origin of the elements used and chemical fertilizers will be washed from the soil fairly easily while organic fertilizers are slower to be depleted in the same manner and if a quality organic fertilizer it will be more complete.
Organic fertilizer consists of large, organic molecules. It provides a suitable habitat for many microorganisms and soil fauna and flora. Organic fertilizer decays slowly, gradually releasing nutrients into the soil. Because it was once alive, it contains many micronutrients that are not present in the typical NPK fertilizer. Compost/organic fertilizer also tends to hold water, unlike NPK fertilizer, which is readily washed away with watering and rain.
if your trying to tell me that
indoor organic soil growers, are not adding any nutes to the soil from seed to harvest ........
yuck fou thats ridiculous