appleseed
Active Member
What I think I know about coir. I'm talking about "guerilla bricks". The kind you soak in water and it turns into something that looks like coffee grounds and dog hair. I know there are other grades but this seems to be the most popular and it's the one I ran across in the store.
I know some people use just the coir and others use 20 or 30% perlite.
I know this is made from coconut husks. Some people say it must be rinsed repeatedly because it's been floating in the ocean and some people say thats how it used to be.
I know it retains alot of water, drains very well and has rooting and sprouting hormones in it from being a seed casing once itself. I put some in my bubbler and the roots on the non-mj sprouts I'm using to test with are impressive to me, but what do I know?
I know that some people treat it like soil you can't over water, just letting it drain well. Some people only water every couple days. It does hold water well.
I know some people use it like a hydroponic medium especially in ebb and flow pots. Then again some people use a constant drip system because the capillary action spreads the small amount of water so evenly and quickly around the media that there aren't any areas that are soaked.
I know there are a number of very good threads on this site about this stuff. Some I've found and others I have not. Some are very informative and some wander off into discussions of who's got the hairiest buds. For myself it has often been a chore to get the good solid info out of the 1000 pages or so of a thread.
I know I'd really like a back and forth dialog with someone who uses this stuff. I'm using it as a soil additive and just started using it in some germinating and sprouting. I think I really like it but while trying to learn more I find I have too much information or not enough. I'll keep messing around with it and will likely start something in 80/20 with perlite soon.
So do you use coir bricks? Name the 3 best coir nutrients. (I don't think fox farms makes one...) Come on folks, whats the real world doing with this stuff?
I know some people use just the coir and others use 20 or 30% perlite.
I know this is made from coconut husks. Some people say it must be rinsed repeatedly because it's been floating in the ocean and some people say thats how it used to be.
I know it retains alot of water, drains very well and has rooting and sprouting hormones in it from being a seed casing once itself. I put some in my bubbler and the roots on the non-mj sprouts I'm using to test with are impressive to me, but what do I know?
I know that some people treat it like soil you can't over water, just letting it drain well. Some people only water every couple days. It does hold water well.
I know some people use it like a hydroponic medium especially in ebb and flow pots. Then again some people use a constant drip system because the capillary action spreads the small amount of water so evenly and quickly around the media that there aren't any areas that are soaked.
I know there are a number of very good threads on this site about this stuff. Some I've found and others I have not. Some are very informative and some wander off into discussions of who's got the hairiest buds. For myself it has often been a chore to get the good solid info out of the 1000 pages or so of a thread.
I know I'd really like a back and forth dialog with someone who uses this stuff. I'm using it as a soil additive and just started using it in some germinating and sprouting. I think I really like it but while trying to learn more I find I have too much information or not enough. I'll keep messing around with it and will likely start something in 80/20 with perlite soon.
So do you use coir bricks? Name the 3 best coir nutrients. (I don't think fox farms makes one...) Come on folks, whats the real world doing with this stuff?