Good PPM for rooted clones?

D.E.S

Member
Hello, I'm not a newb to growing in general, but I'm new to hydroponics and just started my first hydro project with GHE's ecogrower. So, I had some problems with getting the Ph/ppm right due to shitty equipment and my own absent-mindedness. But anyway, the plants are rooted, and been planted to the grower about 24 hours ago. So I finally got it right, the PH is at 5,4 and Ppm at 405 (about 0,57 ec) Is the EC too low, or is the right PH more important now so the plant can use the little bit of nutrients in there? Should I just let my setup roll, and add nutrients at some point?
 

THE KONASSURE

Well-Known Member
rooted clones depends on the strain

Normally I`d feed between 200 and 800 ppm for a plant in early to mid veg

remember to ppm your water before hand so you know what your starting point is

Most tap water has around 50% plant viable things in it

So there is a bit of an argument as to if you discount the whole number or just half of it

My tap water is between 200 and 400ppm out of the tap go`s up and down depending on the time of year
 

D.E.S

Member
Hmmmm My PH keeps dropping ALOT overnight.. Like.. I make the solution, and after a few hours the PH is still a solid 5.4. But after 12 hours it has dropped to fucking 2,5 or so? anyone know whats going on?
 

FrozenChozen

Well-Known Member
tap water only for clones.... imho don't worry about ph and nutrients for clones.... that's just my opinion though
 

D.E.S

Member
Aye.. now the problem is that my PH drops drastically over night... I adjust the Ph to about 5,5~ and it drops to 3 overnight. I cant think of anything else that when I got the clones, one of them had alittle brown on the root, And I thought I just plant it on good enviroment and it will start growing healthy roots. So my thought of it is that maybe the one clones rockwool is adding so muc hbacteria to the tank? It didn't smell bad or wasn't slimy or anything so I planted it despite the fact it had just a bit of sick root...
 

waterdawg

Well-Known Member
I just had the same issue with my setup but I figured it was the new nutes and changed back to my cheap ones and stability returned. Also try lowering your nutes a bit perhaps and see if that helps, newb here so hopefully others will help.
 

Jimdamick

Well-Known Member
For a clone with roots I would start with around 350/400 PPM and keep an eye for yellow tips on the leaves. some plants can take a heavy feed while other will burn at the same PPM, but 400 should be fine.I increase my PPM weekly until I reach a peak of around 1200/1250, and then I go backward for the last two or three weeks. The PH problem is probably a nute or medium thing, but if you know that your PPM going to drop that much, I would adjust my PH to 6, which is an OK measurement. 5.4 in my opinion is too low, I would aim for 5.8
 

Logan Burke

Well-Known Member
That's strange, I read something about causes of PH drop and PH rise, rising can mean your plants using nitrogen (CAN mean that). I can't remember about pH drop though, Ill have to find that thread again...and I'd just keep an eye on that affected root. If it get's worse and spreads, then you've a problem, but until then I think you're alright...may I ask what temperature you're maintaining water at? I caught pythium within my first couple weeks of hydro due to higher than ideal water temps...but if it doesn't smell&isn't slimey, than perhaps it's just bacteria from a light leak or something along those lines? Just thinking out loud. :)

P.S. I agree with Jim, I typically try to keep mine at 5.8 on the dot, but that's just what works for me. For the first while, I even kept it at 6.3 and 6.4....
 

waterdawg

Well-Known Member
It is my understanding that if plants are not taking up nutes ph will drop and yes root rot will also drop ph. I may be way wrong though lol.
 

Logan Burke

Well-Known Member
It is my understanding that if plants are not taking up nutes ph will drop and yes root rot will also drop ph. I may be way wrong though lol.
I believe you're right about the pH drop! You saying that triggered my memory on that thread, and pythium can cause a drop in pH, along with some other things. When your plant has pythium nutrient uptake is slowed also, which could multiply the affect on the pH. If I were you and expected I had pythium/root rot, I would buy a bottle of Hydroguard. I swear by it, I caught pythium WITH h202 being added regularly and came to the conclusion that it's easier to populate beneficial microbes that keep pythium from breeding than to attempt to kill every living organism in your water but the roots themselves. Read this link http://www.growweedeasy.com/root-rot
It's what made me decide to try Hydroguard, and haven't looked back since! I also had the exact same results as the person in that link... :blsmoke:
 

waterdawg

Well-Known Member
I believe you're right about the pH drop! You saying that triggered my memory on that thread, and pythium can cause a drop in pH, along with some other things. When your plant has pythium nutrient uptake is slowed also, which could multiply the affect on the pH. If I were you and expected I had pythium/root rot, I would buy a bottle of Hydroguard. I swear by it, I caught pythium WITH h202 being added regularly and came to the conclusion that it's easier to populate beneficial microbes that keep pythium from breeding than to attempt to kill every living organism in your water but the roots themselves. Read this link http://www.growweedeasy.com/root-rot
It's what made me decide to try Hydroguard, and haven't looked back since! I also had the exact same results as the person in that link... :blsmoke:
No root issues in my grow, i run a tea!
 

Silky Shagsalot

Well-Known Member
rooted clones can take a good bit of feed, they're the same age as the mother sooo. as mentioned, i'd shoot for 5.8 for your ph. your ph swings may be because your rez is too small. if you have several plants sucking on a small amount of water, they can quickly have an effect on your ph...
 

Logan Burke

Well-Known Member
I never considered the small amount of water being a factor of the issue...good point Silky.

No root issues in my grow, i run a tea!
I was meaning that towards D.E.S, but hell yeah man, I've heard of a lot of growers using tea for their roots.
 

waterdawg

Well-Known Member
Just started using tea as opposed to H2O2 and have had great results. Also water temps are easy to control. nutes seem to be a huge factor in stability imo. When not brewing tea I use a product called microbe lift, cheap and seems to be effective
 

Logan Burke

Well-Known Member
Ah, nice to see another grower switching from h202 to bennies, wouldn't you agree that bennies (in all forms, tea, hydroguard, microbe lift, other inoculants) are more effective and healthy than a total sterile root zone? Whether it be via h202, chlorine/chloramines, bleach, and all of the other harsh chemicals people use in the hopes of a totally sterile (by the way, sterile means non-living I'm pretty sure, got's to check my dictionary...:P why'd someone want a total life absent root zone anyways?). This is all my opinion though...another may come by and call me names, but I know what works best for my babies and their roots... :weed:
 

waterdawg

Well-Known Member
Ah, nice to see another grower switching from h202 to bennies, wouldn't you agree that bennies (in all forms, tea, hydroguard, microbe lift, other inoculants) are more effective and healthy than a total sterile root zone? Whether it be via h202, chlorine/chloramines, bleach, and all of the other harsh chemicals people use in the hopes of a totally sterile (by the way, sterile means non-living I'm pretty sure, got's to check my dictionary...:P why'd someone want a total life absent root zone anyways?). This is all my opinion though...another may come by and call me names, but I know what works best for my babies and their roots... :weed:
Pretty new to the tea thing so would not want to make a definitive statement but it seems to work very well. Its way cheaper than H2O2 and fingers dont turn white lol.
 
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