HouseHold Nutrients

dababydroman

Well-Known Member
You don't have to be a chemist,how hard is it to add 1 tablespoon of Magnesium Sulphate (Epsom salts) to a gallon of water?

It's YORKSHIRE, as in the shire of York. England mate,England.
You wouldn't call a Texan a Tecsen would you?
i recall u saying this UK420 > Cultivation > Hydroponics > Coco Coir
budboy299Nov 4 2010, 06:43 PM
Part A 4-0-1
Calcium is 4.5%
Density 1176 g/l
Derived from Calcium Nitrate and Potassium Nitrate
4 Liters of concentrate
16.72 grams of Potassium Nitrate
526.0 grams of Yara Calcium Nitrate
72.3 grams Iron DPTA 7%

witch means nothing to me
 

The Yorkshireman

Well-Known Member
I thought the Shire is where the the Hobbits live....into dwarfing?
Shire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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For other uses, see Shire (disambiguation).
A shire is a traditional term for a division of land, found in the United Kingdom and in Australia. In parts of Australia, a shire is an administrative unit, but it is not synonymous with "county" there, which is a land registration unit.
Individually, or as a suffix in Scotland and in the far northeast of England, the word is pronounced /ˈʃaɪər/ (rhyming with "fire"). As a suffix in an English or Welsh place name, it is in most regions pronounced /-ʃə/ "shur", or sometimes /-ʃɪə/, a homophone of "sheer".
The first shires of Scotland were created in Anglian areas such as Lothian and the Borders, (Bernicia) in the ninth century. The word derives from the Old English, scir, and appears to be allied to shear,shore, "share" as it is a division of the land. King David I more consistently created shires and appointed sheriffs across lowland shores of Scotland. The system was spread to most of the rest of England in the tenth century, somehow losing its original meaning and becoming part of the establishment.
In the British Isles, "shire" is the original term for what is usually known as a county; the word county having been introduced at the Norman Conquest of England. The two are synonymous. Although in modern British usage counties are referred to as "shires" mainly in poetic contexts, terms such as Shire Hall remain common. Shire also remains a common part of many county names.
The shire in early days was governed by an Ealdorman and in the later Anglo-Saxon period by royal official known as a "shire reeve" or sheriff. The shires were divided into hundreds or wapentakes, although other less common sub-divisions existed. An alternative name for a shire was a "sheriffdom" until sheriff court reforms separated the two concepts. In Scotland the word "county" was not adopted for the shires. Although "county" appears in some texts, "shire" was the normal name until counties for statutory purposes were created in the nineteenth century.

PRICK!
 

The Yorkshireman

Well-Known Member
i recall u saying this UK420 > Cultivation > Hydroponics > Coco Coir
budboy299Nov 4 2010, 06:43 PM
Part A 4-0-1
Calcium is 4.5%
Density 1176 g/l
Derived from Calcium Nitrate and Potassium Nitrate
4 Liters of concentrate
16.72 grams of Potassium Nitrate
526.0 grams of Yara Calcium Nitrate
72.3 grams Iron DPTA 7%

witch means nothing to me
If that means nothing to you then you have a long way to go before you grow a decent bud.

CANNA COCO part A
N-P-K Ratio = 4-0-1
Derived from Calcium Nitrate and Potassium Nitrate.
To make 4 Litres of concentrate you need,

16.72 grams of Potassium Nitrate (Ebay)
526.0 grams of Calcium Nitrate (Ebay)
72.3 grams Iron DPTA 7% (Ebay)

Top up to 4 litres with filtered water.

How easy do you need it to be,how about I just make up a batch and sell you it for £15-$25 per litre like CANNA do?
 
I was knockin' around the hardware store today and came across the highly praised Osmocote Plus. I'm looking it over and spot a bottle with similar sized prills called Schultes. Damned if the Schultes and the OC+ aren't just twins by looks,they're twins in NPK ratios and close in micros. The OC + was selling for a little over 17 bucks,while the Schultes was half that.

OC+ is the darling of the Hempy crowd. You might want to pick up some Schultes and go Hempy my friend. It beats mixing up random chemicals not knowing what kind of gaseous byproduct they may produce for you to suck down your lungs.
 

The Yorkshireman

Well-Known Member
I was knockin' around the hardware store today and came across the highly praised Osmocote Plus. I'm looking it over and spot a bottle with similar sized prills called Schultes. Damned if the Schultes and the OC+ aren't just twins by looks,they're twins in NPK ratios and close in micros. The OC + was selling for a little over 17 bucks,while the Schultes was half that.

OC+ is the darling of the Hempy crowd. You might want to pick up some Schultes and go Hempy my friend. It beats mixing up random chemicals not knowing what kind of gaseous byproduct they may produce for you to suck down your lungs.
Random chemicals? Gaseous byproducts?
How narrow minded are you people?
It's 100% pure food grade Potassium and Calcium in granular form for gods sake,you could damn near eat the stuff!
 

The Yorkshireman

Well-Known Member
where do u find that around the house? and why didnt you just say that in the first place?
It can't be found round the house,but if somebody asks that question then they are obviously on a budget. I gave the means to give his plants the best for next to nothing.
You know what they say about assumption being the mother of all fuck ups (or do you need everything spelling out for you?).

and for the record I* do grow great buds, very simply.
But you don't understand the back of a plant food bottle!
 
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