polo the don
Well-Known Member
Very true. You are so right, Sir.I've read the same thing but I hate giving advice. Then saying it's hard to over due it. lol![]()
Very true. You are so right, Sir.I've read the same thing but I hate giving advice. Then saying it's hard to over due it. lol![]()
2 tablespoons per gallon equals 1 cup per cubic foot. Not perfectly but real close. So technically I think we are equal. Because the pro mix is only half my medium.A lot of people use 1tbsp per gallon of pro-mix. I've been doing this so long I don't measure anymore, I can just eyeball it, but that's me. When I did measure I used 1tBsp per gallon of pro-mix/perlite.
I think you have that backwards. Doesn't PH rise as the soil dries. That's what I observe with Pro-Mix HP using a $50 soil ph probe.Since the ph drops as the plant dries our this is why a feed at a higher ph. I expect the ph to have dropped below 6.5 between watering. Therefore my hope is feeding high balances out with the help of the lime.
Have you ever left a batch of nutes sit for a week after the initial mix and PH correction?? There's only one direction that PH is going and down is that direction. The wet soil is the same thing. But the medium has buffer to slow this down that's why we added line in this case. But that buffer is breaking down from day one. Pulverized lime works faster and loses effectiveness faster as well. Pellets work slow but last longer.I think you have that backwards. Doesn't PH rise as the soil dries. That's what I observe with Pro-Mix HP using a $50 soil ph probe.
I'd strongly recommend the OP monitor their runoff as well as invest in a Control Wizard Accurate 8 soil probe.
That's because it's holding the soil more acidic. That's one of the problems of overwatering. Not just the risk of root rot, roots that don't get enough oxygen, etc. But, the plant doesn't experience the full range of ph (from, for example, 5.6 to 6.5, it goes from 5.6 to 6.0). It doesn't get better availability of nutrients available at higher ph.And if you never let the soil dry out proper in between feedings. Eventually it over powers the lime.
Ok, but I'm still wondering how you know the medium's ph drops as it dries? Even if a soil meter isn't accurate (say, 5.0 is really 5.4), you're still going to see the direction of the ph.I've only heard bad things about accurate meters. I've used a blue lab combo meter from the jump. I've looked into the soil PH meters. But from all my reading up on the subject I wouldn't waste money on them. My take away from my reading was they were all basically junk and inaccurate.
You're right about peat. But, I'm still wondering how you know medium becomes more acidic as it dries when you don't have anything to measure the medium's ph? I mean, you're agreeing to disagree about something you haven't measured.I believe when peat moss breaks down it also lowers the PH. I'm sorry but this is one I'm going to have to agree to disagree on. But I'm no scientist. I just do what I do and read the plants. And no ones complaining about the product. Only rave reviews.
I was trying to make sure the OP didn't proceed on false assumptions that his soil is going in the opposite direction than it really is.It seems to me like your trying to prove a point to someone who doesn't have a problem that needs solving.