Organic fertilizers don't need flushing? Do you think the plant can tell the difference between man made and organic particles? It does not matter what you use you still need to remove the active ingredients remainng in the plants make up. Using straight water you should flush daily for 7-10 days for medicinal grade, using a min of twice as much liquid as yu sually use to feed. Growing in soil requires addtional flushing.If you're using synthetic fertilizer you want to flush during the final 2 weeks of the plants life. If you're using organic fertilizer you really don't need to flush at all. You flush with plain ph'd water and usually with 3x the size of the container. So if you have a 3 gallon put you flush with 9 gallons of water.
Synthetic fertilizers have more salt in them than organic fertilizer. If you're trying to get all the chlorophyll out that's another story, although I don't see that point of that since the plants need it. As long as you don't over fertilizer and just continue to use water for the final stages of the plants life the elements in the soil should be used by the end of the life cycle. Salt however will mostly remain without a flush. Also what's the benefit of flushing several days in a row? Wouldn't that just over water the plant? A good flush should rid the container of all the nutrients. If you have to flush 7-10 times you're doing something wrong. I would flush using 2-3x the pot size instead of going by how much you usually water.Organic fertilizers don't need flushing? Do you think the plant can tell the difference between man made and organic particles? It does not matter what you use you still need to remove the active ingredients remainng in the plants make up. Using straight water you should flush daily for 7-10 days for medicinal grade, using a min of twice as much liquid as yu sually use to feed. Growing in soil requires addtional flushing.
Actually they can. Inorganic and organic nutrients both deliver what the plant needs, however the plant needs to use other resources and/or mechanisms in order to process those nutrients. Inorganic (ionic compounds, salts) and organic (carbon based compounds) are totally different.Do you think the plant can tell the difference between man made and organic particles?
First of all why do so many people refer to inorganic nutrients/fertilizers as "synthetic"!!!!!? This is wrong and misleading. There's nothing synthetic about them! They are just ionic salts. Salts occur in nature all the time, what do you think the Great Salt Lake is? I guarantee you it is not a synthetic lake, it just happens to have a lot of sodium chloride in it...a salt. And now for the organic part...even though organic salts do exist, they are rarely used in any fertilizer. They exist as a combination of an organic acid with an inorganic base. Organic nutrients are broken down by microbes, bacteria, enzymes etc., which can then be utilized by the plants. Inorganic nutrients simply dissociate or ionize in solution. These ions can then be taken up by the roots. Sorry to bitch, but i'm just so tired of people saying wrong information about the chemistry aspect of growing.Synthetic fertilizers have more salt in them than organic fertilizer. If you're trying to get all the chlorophyll out that's another story, although I don't see that point of that since the plants need it.