Never had that happen to me. I would say just drop it an hour every once and a while if your real worried. Maybe drop the time to 14 on 10 off for a day or two and then increase it to whatever you want. Might trick it?not true. i've switched a plant from a 24 schedule to a dark period and it flowered on me. I'm not saying that every strain will do this, but it did happen to me. i know they reveg but i really don't wanna go through all that... i might have to i guess....
cellular respiration never stops, but light dependent reactions aka photosynthesis stops in darkness, which has nothing to do with cellular respiration. the plant never "shuts down". a lot of the processes that keep a plant running are a cyclic exchange of electrons and ions along with the forming and breaking of bonds in carrier molecules. these processes don't "shut down" in cellular respiration. just saying.I believe plants will ''shut down'' for a part of the day whether they are getting a dark period or not.
not really, but you're welcome lol.I believe plants will ''shut down'' for a part of the day whether they are getting a dark period or not.
Theres a few reasons to use cover crops, main reason for me with cover crops is to "TILL" your no till beds because it will compact over time. Their roots till compacted soil, your previous crops old roots does the same as well. Some no tillers use gypsum and have worms in their soil beds for that reason also. Cover crops are supposed to die off when your canopy shades off all the light and be gone by the time you harvest. You then sprinkle more cover crop seeds on top at the beginning of each round then cover it with your compost/vermicompost and add your amendments. That being said, I dont see much reason to use it indoors in small pots. I stopped using cover crops myself. Different stokes for different folks, I dont have time to keep mixing up dirt so I no till. Works just as good if not better than any other soil recipe.well one would also think if your trying to be in set with mother nature then i would stay away from making teas and pouring it to leaving it to rain fall and natural occurring i guess teas if that is the case. But back to cover crop this is where i think not till is jumping all over the place or people are trying to do this when in fact cover crop was meant for use lets say farm land acres of land or big area
hey man. I'm new as well to organics and I'm currently putting together my first mixes. i'm almost ready to plant 2 of my 20 gal no tills.Hey everyone. I hate to be "that guy" but I just recently started researching about organics these last couple of months and happened upon this thread about a week ago. I've been reading steadily but the amount of time it would take to get through 324 pages is insane. I have researched a good bit on super soil and was getting ready to go shopping to make my first batch until I started reading about the no till mainly because I was trying to find info on recycling super soil.so to the point, I'm still a couple years behind in this thread and was hoping Yall could share some of your up to date amendment/tea recipes, or at the least post me a link. I am currently running ebb and flow in coco and would like to dive into organics asap. That being said I know it's going to take a while to get some compost ready so I would also like some advice on a quick soil and nute mix I could throw together to get me started and keep me going while I create my own living soil.. Any aand all help is greatly appreciated.
I use homemade worm poo, Gypsum, Neem meal, Crab meal, Kelp, diatomaceous earth, brown rice, and alfalfa. All of these can be added to a soil mix and planted immediately except for the alfalfa. I always put alfalfa on top of my soil and let the worms drag it around. That should cover every base of the plants needs. I always put worm filled EWC on top of any of the amendments I lay down in my no till pot. Now you just have to figure out when to lay this down and that comes with learning your plants needs. Eventually you can get into fermented plant extracts and that is where the money is. I now feed the amendments to my FPE plants and use the FPE on my important plants.Thnx for the info. Ido plan to take a kiss aproach as that is wat im already doing. The biochar is interesting and i always have hardwood lump coal to keep the smoker bbq'n on the weekends so ill pulverize some and add it to the compost pile.What would you recommend as a base soil to start with? Also are there other amendments i could mix in that dont have to break down like ewc,maby kelp or somthing, so i dont have to buy any more bottles?I already have gh nutes that will be useless after my current grow.I also am curious if anyone can enlighten me why sub's ss recipe used straight burns plants but this method does not?
start seedlings in solos and transplant up to 1 gal once they grow up a bit. no bigger than that. then after 3-4 weeks you can put them in whatever you want to.The main concern is that Im only using a 3x3 space.what size pots would Yall recommend I start seedlings in and what would be the smallest size I could run through flower without having to top dress halfway through.iv read that the plants should fade on there own but I would like to insure that happens. Just personal preference cause I love to see the colors come through.
Also could I use straight coco in place of peat or does peat hold a better colony?
Do you use any other sources of silica other than DE?I use homemade worm poo, Gypsum, Neem meal, Crab meal, Kelp, diatomaceous earth, brown rice, and alfalfa.
you can not replace the drainage with coco. the humus is very heavy when wet and will compact the coco down if there is no aeration. Pumice provides not only drainage, but also holds pockets of air within the pumice stone and also retains water at the same time. But wait, there's more! Pumice or other sources of aeration (rice hulls, lava rock which also contains silica @NoTiller, bio char, etc.) provide habitat for your microbes! this is why you need to keep your drainage material. I've read on here that perlite is not good for microbes but i'm not sure how factual that is, haven't looked into it myself.I ask because currently I'm running in straight coco and I love everything about it besides the fact that I have to add all the nutes in. I think It would be better to use as a replacement for perlite or pumice.i would still use a layer of perlite on the bottom of the pot though.
How tall are 7 gallon smartpots? I should be able to achieve minimal height especially since I'm also gonna experiment with mainlining( that's how I found out about RIU) wich should be very helpful because the cross I made stretches like a Mofo.
But anyway, thanks for your thoughts I am hitting the hydro store tomarrow and I didnt want to spend money on stuff I don't need.
I would go with a 30 gallon minimum to get the best and most care free growth. There are some fabric pots that also feature a transplanting fabric pot. I would go with that. Honestly I would get as big of pots as you can and stuff your room full of soil. You have a lot more leeway that way. I found smaller pots were only a headache.The main concern is that Im only using a 3x3 space.what size pots would Yall recommend I start seedlings in and what would be the smallest size I could run through flower without having to top dress halfway through.iv read that the plants should fade on there own but I would like to insure that happens. Just personal preference cause I love to see the colors come through.
Also could I use straight coco in place of peat or does peat hold a better colony?
I used to to use protekt until I ran out. I read online that the soil is at least 30% silicon by weight. I am trying to mimic nature so I started adding tons of forms of silica. Even though it isn't readily soluble it aids the soil structure. The application of protekt does a lot more than adding DE I just don't want another bottle. If you want to add silica and see results I would use the agsil or protekt.Do you use any other sources of silica other than DE?