How do you know you're having ph issues? In what way have you measured the soil ph?
I slowly poured ph adjusted water (netural - 7.0) through the soil then measured the runoff with the new meter I just bought & calibrated.
Which nutrients did you use before, and now? (Couldn't tell if you used FF and now Roots?).
Same nutrients, FF now and before - Only switched soil, as a friend suggested Roots.
You might try backing off how much you feed. I switched to an organic'ish nutrient (Grow More Sea Grow) and had acidification. I started water-only every other watering and it improved greatly. Now I feed 50-75% every watering and things are much better. I'd say water once with water only, with significant runoff (50%), then begin feeding at a lower rate. But, I'm not an organic person so I don't know for sure.
I actually haven't fed them at all. Maybe one or two plants - most were just fed beneficial teas (which I thought was ph adjusted correctly, but turns out last meter was shot)
So best bet to correct this is probably as you said, ph my water to say 6.5-7.0? Then water til approx. 50% runoff?
I suppose i'm not really that organic either with FF nutes - didn't realize they were synthetic til recently.
I used to use GH Flora 3-part and thought you just look for burnt tips to know you're feeding the max. But, I guess organic nutrients are different.
Interesting, that is good to know.
Regarding dolomite, if you're thinking about top dressing it, it's going to take 10-14 days to affect the ph. As you said, the finer/powder it is, the better. If you can't find it powdery enough you can mash it into powder. Make a mortar/pestel out of a bowel and the rounded-end handle of a screwdriver. I'd say 2 Tbsp per gal of medium. I did a test on 8 different half-gal containers using 0 to 8 Tbsp/gal. The ph difference between 2 and 8 was only 0.2. So, I wouldn't worry about "how much." I don't think there's a critical difference between 1 and 3. (8 is an insane amount, I think. I wouldn't go that high. I just wanted to see how it affected ph. As far as a source of cal/mag, that's probably too much.).
Awesome, thank you, that is really good to know.
If you're in a crisis with acidic soil (say, ph 5.0?), you can use hydrated lime for a quick fix. I did it when I first encountered my ph problem which was out of control because I wasn't watching for it. I did 1/2 tsp in 1.5 gal water, which made the water ph 10.2. I poured that in (with a lot of runoff). to immediately raise soil ph. Later that day I did 1 tsp in 1.5 gal which made the water ph 11.2. It was scary giving that strong/alkaline but it had no perceivable affect on the plant's health (other than raising the soil ph, which helped the plant). I was going to lose the plant anyway, so I figured what the heck. I ended up getting 4 oz from her and it's been the smoothest, stoniest I've produced so far.
Hell ya this is awesome, thank you! I would consider it a crisis which is why I posted. Ph of one is 5.0, another 5.1 - i'd say others are WAY off to, but I haven't checked all yet. So would using hydro lime be better than using my horticultural ph up and adjusting water then flushing? Sounds like it. How much lime would you suggest then? Crazy 1/2 tsp bumped yours up that much!
Looking back on it, if I'd caught it earlier I think flushing only would have been sufficient, followed by reduced nute strength. Maybe flushing at that crisis stage would have been better. I'm just saying don't be afraid to use hydrated lime. A small amount once or twice isn't bad. If you don't have the luxury of waiting for dolomite to have an effect, and not sure it's too much nutes, that's an option.
Awe, already answered some of my questions lol. Thank you so much, I really appreciate you taking the time to help out!!