I'm sorry you're having troubles friend. I'll try and help as best I can!
Thanks for helping ShLUbY.
what is your new water source? and what was your old one?
Bottled spring water with unknown ph, previously use RO water with a ph of 7
you can rule out using cal mag altogether.... there's plenty of Ca and Mg in your recipe.
not watering enough will definitely inhibit any nutrient cycling. you know how it is, water is required for microbial life. So were you only watering around the seedling and not the whole container? and fwiw, I would start in a solo cup and not a 1 gal... but that's a minor thing. you can def make a one gal work. i doubt that had anything to do with this.
Yeah, just watering around the seedling, as I felt the roots were still only at that area still, I think this was the first time I went straight to 1 gallons instead of solos.
soil mix is definitely not weak if you followed the CC mix (which i know you did)
I do the math several times before mixing the batch, and I stay straight when mixing to make sure I don't make a stoner move and put like quadruple the amount of ammendments or whatever.
the problem with transplanting into a larger container is it won't matter. you still need roots to get to the new soil, and then you have to deal with moisture issues of keeping a little tiny plant in a big ol pot. if I were to try and transfer these to another mix, i'd maybe try and remove as much of your CC mix as possible from the roots and then plant in the new soil. maybe see how it goes with one of them? this all just seems strange to me...
I'd think I could much of the CC mix off fairly easily, since I doubt there is much root development happened.
I'll check the PH of the water I was using, I have a feeling it's way out of range, would it still seem strange?
I'm sure you know how i feel about rice hulls for drainage... they work well for a little bit... but over time, meh. they just seem to get soft and flimsy, and then start to lack as a drainage material. I would never run a mix with rice hulls as the sole material for drainage. they're also small, which allows for soil compaction. love them as a mulch though!
. this is just my preference from my experience with them. I'm sure others have had plenty of success with them.
Duly noted.
other than that... this recipe should be bangin.
so let me ask you these couple of things...
1) did you thoroughly hydrate your peat moss before mixing up this recipe?
2) how much did you make, and if you had a guess, how much water did you add to the soil once it was mixed?
3) what did you compost this soil in?? (that means cook, but i hate the word cook cause it makes zero sense and i wish it would go away!!!)