cues
Well-Known Member
Dependant upon growing methods IMO. If you are in soil, you ain't going to flush in a few days. No point trying. If you are in hydro, you have the luxury of controlling nutes more precisely.
The argument between organics and 'chemicals' however, I call BS on. It's all the same base elements whether based on cow/bat poo or a bottle of whatever from the store. The main difference is in symbiotic bacteria and fungi such as Mycorrizae (the latest buzz-word for a group of fungi which we don't yet understand).
Which is just one reason why we all keep coming around to the same arguments. For some of us, flushing works, for others, it doesn't. Athough the largest variable appears to be between hydro (in it's various forms) and soil (and I include coco in this at it does tend to hold salts, (maybe i am wrong on this, but that's my opinion)), there are other variables.
However, I will now contradict myself and say that there are many symbiotic relationships in soil that we are as yet to understand. We have the basics above ground (companion planting to attract predators for aphids, etc) and below ground (nutrients, CEC, infliltration and drainage rates) in relation .
Compost teas are a good example and a possible (and probable) way forward.
The thing is, even though we can go to the moon, and can clean our own pee to drink it again, we still don't have a complete understanding of exactly how compost teas work. We just throw in the word Mycorrizae.
We don't know how these bacterial and fungal relationships affect the plant. I believe that is one of the reasons questions like this don't have one answer.
There are many others. VPD, Co2 levels, Plant variety, curing/drying times/temps/humidity levels.
Even just personal preference or smoking/cooking methods.
The argument between organics and 'chemicals' however, I call BS on. It's all the same base elements whether based on cow/bat poo or a bottle of whatever from the store. The main difference is in symbiotic bacteria and fungi such as Mycorrizae (the latest buzz-word for a group of fungi which we don't yet understand).
Which is just one reason why we all keep coming around to the same arguments. For some of us, flushing works, for others, it doesn't. Athough the largest variable appears to be between hydro (in it's various forms) and soil (and I include coco in this at it does tend to hold salts, (maybe i am wrong on this, but that's my opinion)), there are other variables.
However, I will now contradict myself and say that there are many symbiotic relationships in soil that we are as yet to understand. We have the basics above ground (companion planting to attract predators for aphids, etc) and below ground (nutrients, CEC, infliltration and drainage rates) in relation .
Compost teas are a good example and a possible (and probable) way forward.
The thing is, even though we can go to the moon, and can clean our own pee to drink it again, we still don't have a complete understanding of exactly how compost teas work. We just throw in the word Mycorrizae.
We don't know how these bacterial and fungal relationships affect the plant. I believe that is one of the reasons questions like this don't have one answer.
There are many others. VPD, Co2 levels, Plant variety, curing/drying times/temps/humidity levels.
Even just personal preference or smoking/cooking methods.