Thanks man. It was on another thread. I had never heard that before, just wanted to get some clarification.Lol who told you that? I've never heard anything like that. I guess if you think about it more lighting usually means bigger plants which means more nutes. But I wouldn't go as far as basing my nute schedule around the wattage of my lights. Just look at your plant, she will tell you when she's hungry I usually start out at 1/4 strength nutes when they show signs of being hungry. If you base your nute schedule on your light wattage be ready for a bumpy ride especially when you switch strains up. Every strains needs are different no matter your lights
Bro you just came thru with the package lol. Thanks!every answer- http://catnews.org/FREE Pot Books/
That makes senseNutrient schedules are just a guide. Every environment, strain and grow are different. Over time with some trial and error you will find what works best for your garden.
Cool bro I might try something different after this grow. I was referred to emerald harvest by a friend. This is my first grow but I think it's coming out good.in the few years I maintained a cool flood/drain hydro I used a different
nutrient system each cycle and followed directions to the T. All of them performed really well
and it came down to cost and ease of use for my final choice. Advanced Nutrients, Technaflora, DutchMaster Gold were notably successful every time. my environment/grow habits were always dialed in while doing this and I believe this is usually the major culprit when plants fail. I never added anything, no corrections or fixes, didnt buy into any others that were not required per instructions.
The old Recipe for Success! I agree for 25 bucks or so it's a nice beginners kit.easiest one I ever used was the technaflora kit. it was fun and very effective and my first store bought pre mixed hydro nutes
Sounds like my type of partyeasiest one I ever used was the technaflora kit. it was fun and very effective and my first store bought pre mixed hydro nutes
Advanced nutrients are very easy to use especially in hydro! I haven't had to ph my Rez once since ANin the few years I maintained a cool flood/drain hydro I used a different
nutrient system each cycle and followed directions to the T. All of them performed really well
and it came down to cost and ease of use for my final choice. Advanced Nutrients, Technaflora, DutchMaster Gold were notably successful every time. my environment/grow habits were always dialed in while doing this and I believe this is usually the major culprit when plants fail. I never added anything, no corrections or fixes, didnt buy into any others that were not required per instructions.
Actually basing your nutrient strength and irrigation/fertilisation times is DIRECTLY related to the amount (wattage) and type (spectrum) of artificial light. Along with temperature, carbon dioxide levels and relative humidity.Lol who told you that? I've never heard anything like that. I guess if you think about it more lighting usually means bigger plants which means more nutes. But I wouldn't go as far as basing my nute schedule around the wattage of my lights. Just look at your plant, she will tell you when she's hungry I usually start out at 1/4 strength nutes when they show signs of being hungry. If you base your nute schedule on your light wattage be ready for a bumpy ride especially when you switch strains up. Every strains needs are different no matter your lights
So basically what I'm getting out of the responses and from my local store is that it's true but it's not true.Actually basing your nutrient strength and irrigation/fertilisation times is DIRECTLY related to the amount (wattage) and type (spectrum) of artificial light. Along with temperature, carbon dioxide levels and relative humidity.
First off it would do you well to get a TDS/PPM (actually an EC) meter. This tells you how strong you make your fertilizer solution. And a pH pen is a good idea as well. If your serious abouy growing indoors with the common bottled nutrients the grow store sells...your gonna end up getting these 2 meters anyways. Might as well start now. They dont have to be the expensive ones either.So basically what I'm getting out of the responses and from my local store is that it's true but it's not true.
That's exactly what my local guy said. Should I order the $10-$20 meters off of Amazon? His start at $50 in store.First off it would do you well to get a TDS/PPM (actually an EC) meter. This tells you how strong you make your fertilizer solution. And a pH pen is a good idea as well. If your serious abouy growing indoors with the common bottled nutrients the grow store sells...your gonna end up getting these 2 meters anyways. Might as well start now. They dont have to be the expensive ones either.
dunno about beginner, its complete as any system. My first harvest was and still is better weed than any I've sampled and still is tops in my book.The old Recipe for Success! I agree for 25 bucks or so it's a nice beginners kit.
your plant will only grow to its weakest resource.So basically what I'm getting out of the responses and from my local store is that it's true but it's not true.
Sounds like my type of party
i didn't mean beginner contents. I agree it's complete. I meant it more as ease of use and results.dunno about beginner, its complete as any system. My first harvest was and still is better weed than any I've sampled and still is tops in my book.