SonsOfAvery
Well-Known Member
If you plan on over feeding throughout the grow and then trying to flush out the excess at the end, why don't you just save yourself time, energy and nutes by not over feeding it in the first place?
(I'm copying this from a thread I just read about 30mins ago...
And this sums up the flush argument best I think.)
"I'm going to say this one more time and never again on this forum because it's exhausting.
When you feed a plant in flower you don't end up with "buds full of fertilizer". There is a very specific set of internal processes that allow particular ions to be used as a source of fuel for the plant as a whole. The plant, in turn, allocates those resources according to what part of its life cycle it is in. In the case of a plant in late bloom, the entire focus of the plant is producing flowers. It will take whatever resources it has to accomplish this goal. If you stop providing a source of exogenous nutrients it will begin cannibalizing stored nutrients from its own biomass to provide the buds what they need.
Here comes the big question so read this next part carefully....
What is the chemical difference between what the plant sends to the buds to facilitate development while being fed exogenously, versus what it sends to the buds to facilitate development when it is pulling the nutrients from its own biomass?
If you can provide scientifically verifiable evidence that the ions being used by the buds for developement are different when provided exogenously you will officially be the first person to actually prove that 'flushing' makes the flowers better.
Lastly, the reduction of chlorophyll compounds in the buds is a function of proper drying and curing. Black ash, buds that go snap crackle pop, bad flavor.... all a product of improper post harvest drying/curing."
(I'm copying this from a thread I just read about 30mins ago...
And this sums up the flush argument best I think.)
"I'm going to say this one more time and never again on this forum because it's exhausting.
When you feed a plant in flower you don't end up with "buds full of fertilizer". There is a very specific set of internal processes that allow particular ions to be used as a source of fuel for the plant as a whole. The plant, in turn, allocates those resources according to what part of its life cycle it is in. In the case of a plant in late bloom, the entire focus of the plant is producing flowers. It will take whatever resources it has to accomplish this goal. If you stop providing a source of exogenous nutrients it will begin cannibalizing stored nutrients from its own biomass to provide the buds what they need.
Here comes the big question so read this next part carefully....
What is the chemical difference between what the plant sends to the buds to facilitate development while being fed exogenously, versus what it sends to the buds to facilitate development when it is pulling the nutrients from its own biomass?
If you can provide scientifically verifiable evidence that the ions being used by the buds for developement are different when provided exogenously you will officially be the first person to actually prove that 'flushing' makes the flowers better.
Lastly, the reduction of chlorophyll compounds in the buds is a function of proper drying and curing. Black ash, buds that go snap crackle pop, bad flavor.... all a product of improper post harvest drying/curing."