Knew you could do it! Look 100x's better. What do you put in feed teas? Do you top dress? Do you do an all in one tea?Coco plants I nearly killed off, starting to come back. Im trying to keep them short this time. They grow stupid fast.
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I feel bad for all the bottled water buyers, financially unable, or just misguided growers who know nothing about real organics. I love the idea of a baby step into organics thread. A thread with just the basics to get people started in the right direction to making their own cheaper better soil. Big ups Ham!What I want to do, is write a 'grow guide' to be distributed for free, featuring guys like Rrog and Gandalf's work along with a few others. Put together a few 'grow templates', instructions a noob can follow to the letter. I had the idea a while ago already, was going to make a start on it but then my free time evaporated for a bit. I am still keen. It would pretty much be a condensed version of a run from each grower. All info used with permission of course. Pics, soil mixes, teas (that bit might get tricky, tons of intellectual property involved there. Perhaps just reference the name of the recipe without publishing it in full, still figuring that one out).
How much drainage mat'l is in your mix?Can someone post the Rev's all purpose tea recipe?
I am done with bags and air pots.
They dry out way too fast in my tent with low rh and lots of air moving through.
Didn't Subcool hate on them as they dry out too fast?
I took my superoots airpot, 5 gallon size and lined it with landscape fabric. Then they were filled with soil and I put in clones.
The damn things are still drying out too fast.
I just ordered a mess of square, 5 gallon pots. I am going to drill holes in the bottom and line it with landscape fabric. That should be just enough air flow and hopefully not too much.
I like square pots because of the way roots react. In looking at the clones' roots in square cups versus clones in round cups - the roots like square better, they are less likely to do the spiral thing.
I am going to try super soil mix, but add some potassium phosphate and possibly some coco. I may go with coco chunks.
The coco chunks are BADASS. I absolutely love them. Makes a soil drain like you won't believe, but the chunks themselves can hold onto it like sponges too. You can water almost as often as you want and still have a huge buffer. Highly recommended from my side! The difference between my mixes with chunks/croutons v/s pyth is incredible. Roots... KABOOOOOM. The literally explode in there. My plants are like ice-bergs in veg, more bio mass under the soil than above, and I mean a LOT more. In flower this has come into play in a BIG way. I am getting bud sites all over the branches, each branch is one huge cola already.Can someone post the Rev's all purpose tea recipe?
I am done with bags and air pots.
They dry out way too fast in my tent with low rh and lots of air moving through.
Didn't Subcool hate on them as they dry out too fast?
I took my superoots airpot, 5 gallon size and lined it with landscape fabric. Then they were filled with soil and I put in clones.
The damn things are still drying out too fast.
I just ordered a mess of square, 5 gallon pots. I am going to drill holes in the bottom and line it with landscape fabric. That should be just enough air flow and hopefully not too much.
I like square pots because of the way roots react. In looking at the clones' roots in square cups versus clones in round cups - the roots like square better, they are less likely to do the spiral thing.
I am going to try super soil mix, but add some potassium phosphate and possibly some coco. I may go with coco chunks.
You just have to water more. Too bad, as the fabric pots are the best for microbes and roots, but one size solution can't fit all, I know.
I've been using coarse perlite, about 10 cups in a mix with one bag of ffof. I don't think that is the problem, I think it is that I move so much dry air through the tent that fabric, or air pots just dry out too fast. I have a plant in a regular 3 gallon pot and only need to water it every 3 days. The clones in lined 5 gallon airpots are drying out in almost a day.How much drainage mat'l is in your mix?
I noticed a big difference when I added coco chunks to pure coco.The coco chunks are BADASS. I absolutely love them. Makes a soil drain like you won't believe, but the chunks themselves can hold onto it like sponges too. You can water almost as often as you want and still have a huge buffer. Highly recommended from my side! The difference between my mixes with chunks/croutons v/s pyth is incredible. Roots... KABOOOOOM. The literally explode in there. My plants are like ice-bergs in veg, more bio mass under the soil than above, and I mean a LOT more. In flower this has come into play in a BIG way. I am getting bud sites all over the branches, each branch is one huge cola already.
That is a good call. I have done that with tea, basically trying to jam as much tea in there as I can without runoff. I should do the same for regular waterings.Let me share another tip from The Rev, and I know Gandalf also finds this works for him: Water twice. Once until there is slight seepage, wait an hour, then water again. This makes sure you have no dry pockets in the soil. Even moisture content. I have also taken to this practice now. When I feed teas, I also water, wait, then feed.
Thanks. I'll give it a go.Anyhow, the 'All Purpose Tea'
1 tablespoon kelp meal
1 teaspoon high-nitrogen bird/bat guano
1 tablespoon all-purpose dry organic nutrient
1 tablespoon all-natural molasses
BUBBLE FOR 24 HOURS
And then
¼ cup liquid Big Bloom by Fox Farm (or something with similar N-P-K ratios)
1 teaspoon liquid fish fertilizer
½ cup fresh, healthy living compost, or earthworm castings
10 drops CaMg+ by General Organics, or something comparable with no EDTA logos on the label
and no added iron.
BUBBLE FOR 24 ADDITIONAL HOURS
It is pretty damn clever this one. NOT an ACT strictly speaking. It is a 'nute tea' that then has microbes added once it is already super-rich in all the nutes. I left out the guano as I can't find it, and replaced with an additional teaspoon of a chicken-poop based fertilizer. Another tweak I made is to use TWO gallons of water, firstly my brewer can handle it, secondly it gives me an EC of around 1.5, which is where I used to feed my Hydro babies at, so I know it is max power minimum risk. This way I can literally switch off the bubblers and feed IMMEDIATELY. THAT is my definition of fresh.
Trousers, this stuff kicks ass.
I agree here. Seen results in those pots like nowhere else. I wish I could get some.These fabric pots are very popular among some of the most respected growers I know, so it would be great to figure this out a bit before abandoning, maybe.
Not at all. They use what is called 'Hygroscopic water' and to remove that from soil you actually have to cook it, like in an oven. Even when your soil feels bone-dry, the microbes are thriving. As long as your roots are not getting air-pruned back into the pot there is no problem mate.The microbes go dormant in completely dried out soil, right?