Thanks for the comments, UB and much of the credit goes out to you. You have done more to help get new growers started off in the right direction than anyone I know of on here.
Thanks, I try.
I'm basically just a farm boy, loving life out in the country. So as you might guess, the plant did not receive a lot of special treatment.The soil mix was 50% garden soil (fine loam), 25% cheap potting mix and 25% aged horse shit, mixed together well in the container ( 32 gal. ) and left outside for a week or so to get things going in the mix. After the 4 or 5 week old plant is in the container, I top dress with about a 1" layer of aged chicken shit, pulled back from the main stalk a bit. I maintain the top dressing for the plants entire life.
32 gal. pot? No wonder you had such a fine looking monster, sheesh! Being lazy, I cheat.
I dig a hole about 3" deep, pull out any plugs in the drain holes (usually 6 holes in the commercial black pots), drop the 5 gal. pot in the hole, pack soil around the outside.....done.... and the plant/pot is stable during high winds. Roots will grow out of the drain holes into native soil and "re-purpose" the water/salts that have drained out of your pot. If you want to play games, make your own pots using a roll of RootBuilder. I've got tropicals in RootBuilder pots so big it takes a whole tractor bucket to fill them up. About 16"H X 30" W or so.
I'm surprised you were able to pull it off with garden soil additions. Usually that is too heavy but your success speaks for itself. I too am a user of horse manure. To me it's the best of the manures. Watch your source. If those horse grazing fields have been sprayed with broad leaf herbicides like picloram it will be passed through the horse and toast your faves. If you ever see any stem disfiguration, leaf chlorosis and disfiguration....your manure has
broad leaf herbicide residues.
Chicken chit is great too, but can be hot. I don't see any burn in that plant though. Just frickin' incredible! Am also a farm boy raising all kinds of goodies. Just got through fermenting a wonderful wine from my grapes that should really be "big" for example.
After that I check on the plant almost daily and try to read whats going on with the entire process. I will only water my plants with rain water, as my well water is loaded with calcium and has a ph of around 8.5 .
"Read" - yep, you are a Master Gardener.
Rainwater is the best no question about it. It contains beneficial microbes, myco fungi and when sourced from a thunderstorm, nitrates. I too collect rainwater off a greenhouse gutter using one of these -
http://www.tanksforless.com/Norwesco-Rainwater-Tanks_c75.htm. Installed a cheap transfer pump, the plants love it and so do I thanks to the convenience. My well water is like yours, very hard like 800+ TDS, mainly bicarbs of Ca and Mg. Some sulfates which drops the pH down to 7.0.
As for fertilizers, I like Dyna-Grow because it's complete and the nutrient ratios they use when formulating it make good sense to me, I keep a bottle of Foliage, Grow, and Bloom on hand most the time. What formula I use at any particular time is always determined by the plants stage of growth and what my plant is trying to tell me when I go for a visit. I can tell you, and this may surprise some of you, I use more of the Grow formula during bloom than I do even the bloom formula and very rarely do I ever use any of them at full strength.
Been preaching its virtues for years. BTW, Homebrewer did a clone test regarding yields and plant health between Grow and FP and the FP slightly eeked out the Grow. He has a very detailed journal at Riddlem3.com, an edited version here. You belong over there.
The 32 gallon container proved to be much to small toward the end and I was watering and feeding way to much. Thats a mistake I will not make again because it's a pain in the ass and it holds the plant back from achieving it's full potential. I'm an outdoor guy and I like those healthy, huge, outdoor plants, growing under the full sun, living out in nature, right where they should be, but of course, I'm one of the fortunate ones that can get away with it because of my location.
I hear that. I add clay silt to my pots to tighten them up a bit. I can only imagine how much you have to water that monster. It must wick off 2 gallons a day or more.
As far as balancing the PH out in my nutrient solution when I feed, sometimes I do, sometimes I don't. I don't like to hit my plants continually with a solution thats way out of range, especially when I know the container is not large enough to begin with.
Thanks again UB, for helping me along many years ago and also for the help you have continued to give many others since that time. You Da Man !!
I don't worry about pH as one of my threads suggests.
Good luck, and keep in touch with photos and such.
Uncle Ben