OldMedUser
Well-Known Member
I got one of those cheap pH/moisture/light meters too but wouldn't trust it's pH readings at all. The best is of course the most expensive and that's a good digital pH meter. Getting the proper pH when growing in soil isn't just reading what washes out of the pot when you water it either. You need to water/feed until the pot/bag is soaked real good. Then let it sit overnight and add enough water to get some runoff and test that as it takes time for the pH to settle after first watering/feeding. That's how the commercial greenhouse growers get accurate readings of the conditions in the root zone.I bought a soil pH reading that also has a moisture reader. My soil is about 6.8 but I noticed that even though my pot feels empty and I would normally water, in the center of the pot it's still pretty damn moist. So I think it conclusion, I was just overwatering. I have some organic plant food I got from coast of maine...in this video I watched the lady said over time you may have to add a bit. So if by correcting my overwatering problem doesn't fix this then I'll top dress.
I suspect the reason the middle of your rootball stays wet is by not doing a couple of transplantings the bulk of the roots are in the bottom of the bag so suck up all the water down there while the top dries out from evaporation leaving the center all wet. In a plastic pot I'd pull the plant out and chop off the roots in the bottom to force them to branch out further up but hard to do in a fabric bag. The more I read about those the less I want to try them. The plastic smart pots look like they would do the trick for root pruning but open easy for root trimming or just to see how the roots are doing.