Al B. Fuct
once had a dog named
You're discovering one of the biggest drawbacks to running a grow op.... you're tied to it. No holidays for indoor farmers...
nit-picking, i know some chemistryHe says this like he this did not know the difference between salinity (presence of NaCl [table salt] in solution) and ionic compounds. Ionic compounds are sometimes referred to as "salts" of a particular element. There had better be no 'salt' (NaCl) in your soil or nutrient solution. His comments on salt in tapwater apply mainly to those using a salt-based water softener. Municipalities don't add salt to treated water.
Yea but this is like being "tied down" to my wife- I wouldnt want it any other way!!You're discovering one of the biggest drawbacks to running a grow op.... you're tied to it. No holidays for indoor farmers...
4" cubes won't be quite large enough on their own for the rootmass needed by vigorous, mature plants. You may want to put those cubes in ~175mm plastic pots stuffed with RW floc or nest them in pots of clay pellets, with the RW cube 1/2" above the flood level. The watering requirements are quite different; for pots of RW, 1x/day perhaps a 2nd flood a couple hours before lights-off for large plants. Pots of pellets can be flooded much more frequently, starting with 5x/day and up for mature vigorous plants.So now that I have converted over to ebb and flood, how often should I be flooding the trays?
I am using 4" rockwool cubes, they seem to be pretty soaked still even though the last time they were flooded was about 24 hrs ago..
Yep. If your cubes are remaining too wet, it's because your plants are not yet large enough to suck up a large proportion of the water in 24 hrs. Very small plants may only need watering every other day in RW.I read somewhere in your harvest every 2 weeks thread that you were flooding when about half the water weight was gone from the medium..
Should this be the case for the cubes as well, even though it may take 24-48 or more hours to get to that weight?
It would be. Water will lose most of the added dissolved O2 in about 24h. However, as the plant removes water from the cube, air is drawn in to replace it, albeit in very small amounts in RW.It seems the available oxygen in the cubes may be pretty much depleted after sitting that long ...
Try putting them in pots with the media choices described above.I will be looking at a medium like fytocell or perlite for the next batch, but have to make this work for about 4-5 more weeks..
Since I work from home, and can keep an eye on the cab in my office all day, I think the pellets may be a great choice, as i can water more frequenty and keep fresh flow over the roots.. Everything is on a timer, but its always reassuring to know something stupid hasnt happened, and I am not pumping my tank into the kitchen celing downstairs4" cubes won't be quite large enough on their own for the rootmass needed by vigorous, mature plants. You may want to put those cubes in ~175mm plastic pots stuffed with RW floc or nest them in pots of clay pellets, with the RW cube 1/2" above the flood level.
Yep, they keep developing roots until the day you chop them. I don't know what trade-off in height you're thinking of.Being as these have been flowering for 4 weeks now, do you think the remaining time ( appx 4 wks?) will be long enough to allow a useable root system to develop in the new media ( do they even root strongly while flowering?) , and is it worth the tradeoff in height?
If you're in wk4 of flowering, that's about the time that they stop gaining vertical height, anyway.I havent seen a lot of stretching lately, though so may get away with it..
heh, thanks. If it makes you feel any better, you can be assured there's no shortage of buds around here.Just wish i could fire one up with ya for your trouble!!
I dont doubt that, somehow...heh, thanks. If it makes you feel any better, you can be assured there's no shortage of buds around here.
Unlikely it's a deficiency. When you're using commercially made nutes, deficiencies are rare, but pH being off can induce nutrient lockout, which appears as a deficiency. What's the pH & ppm?I have been noticing a bit of droopiness from the plants on the left side of the cab( the ones with the best bud development so far...) for the last few days, and now this AM, i see this all over the leaves- Mostly top growth..
Is this nute burn or a deficency?
pH & ppm are OK, of course.Ph has been 5.8-6.0, Checked PPM this morning, was 1270
Air temp is 74deg F
weird, that leaf damage looks like high temps or too close a proximity to the light.Proximety to leaves seemed likely to me too, but there are some of the same symptoms in some of the lowest points of the canopy too..
Unless your tapwater comes out of the sea, you don't need RO. You very likely wouldn't need CalMag if you were using tapwater.I have been consistently been supplementing with cal-mag up until this last tank. I use RO water,-the water here sucks.
Since it has been a few weeks without a good flush I went on ahead and rinsed the medium out real well using 15ml/Gal Clearex.. and RO water .
ppm of what is 50-600?PPM when i started was 50, it finally stopped rising at around 600.
If your plants are perking up after flushing (and if you must flush, use plain water, adj pH to 5., there's an excess of something. Could be the CalMag. I would not add Ca & Mg unless I saw a clearly recognisable deficiency.They always seem to blast off for a few days after a flush too..Guess it makes them happy .
How do you know your water sucks? Did you have the water analysed? What were the results?-the water here sucks.
About 75-76 would be max.. Its 5:00 PM here now, and holding steady at 75F.pH & ppm are OK, of course.
Is 74F your peak temp during lights on?
Unless your tapwater comes out of the sea, you don't need RO. You very likely wouldn't need CalMag if you were using tapwater.
Clearex is a 'magic sauce' which is known to contain sugars. Don't use this or any other sugar-containing sauce in your op.
I havent flushed in better than 3 weeks, and only did so today because of the issue we are seeing, so doubtful thats the cause..but if you flush from the top, you're putting those nutes deep into the rootmass. I half wonder if that's what happened here.
The runoff from the flush- According to Clearex directions, you are supposed to flush until the PPM of the runoff stops rising..ppm of what is 50-600?
The closest thing I can find in that guide is the pic of magnesuim deficency..If your plants are perking up after flushing (and if you must flush, use plain water, adj pH to 5., there's an excess of something. Could be the CalMag. I would not add Ca & Mg unless I saw a clearly recognisable deficiency.
'Kool Bloom' if I recall correctly is a P & K additive. Use this for 1 week, in week 6 of flowering- only.
You can ditch the rest of the magic sauces.
Check this plant problem guide, see if any of these look like the leaf damage you're seeing.
Just another thought- I WAS using a drip irrigation system, then changed over to the ebb and flood. I never saw it like this until i switched..Flushing isn't necessary and in fact can cause problems. If there's an accumulation of nutrient salts on the surface of your medium, if you top-flush, you can shift those concentrated nutes down into the rootzone and induce a burn. Nute salts on the top surface of media really don't hurt anything as the roots are in the bottoms of the pots- but if you flush from the top, you're putting those nutes deep into the rootmass. I half wonder if that's what happened here.
Actually it IS very close to being from the sea.... im in a coastal area of S. Fla, where the water table is about 10 ft or so.The only real problem in tapwater is presence of NaCl.
Just a bit of iron, no big deal.Nasty looking orange-brown residue in the sinks and around buildings where the sprinklers hit are the norm..
Have you ever tried to remove a dried crust of nute salts? I have yet to find a solvent that will dissolve nute salts.I had no idea about the sugars in Clearex- Just thought it was supposed to break down the salts
Yes, if you're going to flush, you'd keep dumping 5.8 water through the rootmass until the ppm drops to the ppm of the flush soln. The magic sauce won't help, tho.The runoff from the flush- According to Clearex directions, you are supposed to flush until the PPM of the runoff stops rising..
OK, what can cause an Mg def- aside from a real lack of Mg? You can bet that there's plenty of Mg in your nutes and your tapwater. Low pH (5.5 and down) can do it, but if I recall correctly, you said pH was OK.The closest thing I can find in that guide is the pic of magnesuim deficency..
This is handy, stolen from St0ney on gardenscure.com.