Is this the Beginning of Iron Deficiency?

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
When you stick to the same successful method your plants should improve in yield and quality all the time.

If you are striving to get better at helping your plants reach their potential.

I have only finally maxed out my results in my current pot size from the seeds I like to run. Took 2.5 years before my average stopped getting higher. It is as or more complex and potent. And tasty and strong smelling as anything I have tried. But it was not always that good. Took tons of practice.

Changing methods and products to get better results is just chasing your tail in my opinion.

I only make minor changes at a time to experiment and only on one plant. I can't risk them all.

Fun reading and seeing and talking about it though.
Changing products will be chasing the devil for sure. But adding a technique such as ph balancing may in fact have a noticeable change, however like you state it also may not. I just see people that get good yields and potent buds hold their nose high at a method change. Some times they are right but some times they are also missing out on evolving science. Wasn't all that long ago the common thought was the earth is flat.
 

JohnDoeTho

Well-Known Member
I don't think the suggestion was to change nutrient but merely that it might not be a bad idea to still balance it even though your product claims you don't have to. Not pushing the subject, just urging to keep an open mind.
 
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