greasemonkeymann
Well-Known Member
I'd safe it's safe to say the correlation between an organic grow and a chelated chemical hydro grow are totally different entities.so you guys don't leach N like many are prone to do in hydro?
I personally (in hydro) didn't leach N in hydro but I did feed a different ratio of NPK during bloom
but I suppose with the natural buffering system theres less reason to do something like this
and it would be easier to keep your mix more reliable if your not changing the ratio
In fact i'd wager to say forget all that you've learned in regards to applying the hydro logic/rules to organics.
the key is to treat it almost like a buffet for a fat guy..
you want anything and everything he could possibly want to eat, for the entire time he's there.
let him take what he wants, and let him take what he needs.
Conversely a hydroponic system is more akin to strapping the fat guy down and forcing nutrient shakes down his throat every X amount of time.
Knowhattamean Verne?
But no, i don't leach anything at all, i water my plants and pay for the energy, and that's about it
the bulk of my work is attributed to the constant cloning/pheno hunting of strains.
And the assembling and turning of the compost, and feeding my worms.
that's it.
hydro was way more work, way more testing, way more ph adjusters, more bottles, this and that.
Expensive shit, and it's part of the operating system, so it's needed continuously.
But some growers like that, more interaction makes them feel interactive.
Like i always say, humans are tinkering animals to begin with, we like to adjust and fuck with things, so for some that's good.
Maybe it's cuz i'm not a spring-chicken anymore, but for me? If i can get much BETTER results from much less work and less money?
Well shit..
I'm there.
I don't feel the need to be involved, i've been doing this for so long i don't get any kick off anything like that. In fact at this point i almost feel weird taking any credit on the quality of my herb anyways, the friggin soil grows the plant, i just water it
and to a degree i can't take a whole lot of credit for my compost-based techniques either, all i did was look at how mother nature works, and tried to replicate that.
Simple. Yet sadly it's not nearly as popular as it should be.
Growers get intimidated by some of it, hearing these fancy words, humic and fulvic acids, microbes, mychorrizhae, bacteria based mixes, fungal based, etc.
I admit, if you don't understand it all it could be a lil overwhelming.
whereas hydro is "simpler" to the beginner
i write simpler in quotes because for me it wasn't simple, it was like babysitting
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