How do youuuu decide what order to mix

Mashoe

Member
Just curious how everyone mixes there nutes and how they decide what order to mix em in. If some one simplifies chelates and how to figure out what nutes are natural chelates bonus points
 

JD_85

Well-Known Member
as doniawon said but if u use a three part u add micro after sillica but b4 grow and bloom then your additives if u choose too
 

doniawon

Well-Known Member
And mag cal first before 3 part.
Unless ur using silica..silica first, cal mag, micro, grow bloom..

BB'S AND ENZYMES.. last. Make sure water is free of chlorine, distilled, or ro.
I'm watching maury povitch n typing this out, I should get a life. Lol
 

Mashoe

Member
And mag cal first before 3 part.
Unless ur using silica..silica first, cal mag, micro, grow bloom..

BB'S AND ENZYMES.. last. Make sure water is free of chlorine, distilled, or ro.
I'm watching maury povitch n typing this out, I should get a life. Lol
Interesting so say im using a silicate as a ph up is not the best to ph after mixing?
 

Mashoe

Member
I use the 3 part general, b52, cal mag, root lx. In veg as my main feed and give them all kinds of extra goodies in half and flush days like fish Agra and ocean magic or monster, fulvic and humeric acids.
For flower my mix gets a lil weird when I get into heavy feeds with a bunch of carb blast, liquid cool bloom and overdrive
 

Mashoe

Member
And I thought mixing calmag and potassium silicate right after each other would cause a percipient

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelation

Fertilizers
Metal chelate compounds are common components of fertilizers to provide micronutrients. These micronutrients (manganese, iron, zinc, copper) are required for the health of the plants. Most fertilizers contain phosphate salts that, in the absence of chelating agents, typically convert these metal ions into insoluble solids that are of no nutritional value to the plants. EDTA is the typical chelating agent that keeps these metal ions in a soluble form.[24]
 
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