I pretty much do the same. I water until I have some water in my trays then I stop. I do the " lifting of the pot technique " or if I notice a slight droop ( that minor drop that tells you the ladies are thirsty ) I water.. I have used various drip system methods with coco coir but I have yet to try them in soil/organics... Blumat sounds awesome though, but I was always taught that letting your medium dry some will make the root system stronger as the roots search for water. Then again blumats sound like cool shit! If anyone uses them in soil/organics please share ..I do a wet/dry cycle and when I water I water to the point where I have standing water in my trays underneath. The water usually gets soaked up within a day. I haven't seen adverse effects cause of this unless I don't let them dry out. I have thought about using blumats or the like but I run a perpetual and my plant are on rollers so they move often and am unsure how easy it would be to constantly be moving my plants with hoses coming out of all of them.
I like that explanation, I feel like roots extending to find the water deep in the pots or anywhere it’s present is good for the roots to stretch out in search of water, so I say a dry cycle a couple or few times wouldn’t be too bad, good explanation though.I shoot for wet-damp cycles without ever going to full "dry". Truthfully though, "dry" is not actually dry at a microscopic level. There are three types of soil water.
-Gravitational water- Flows through soil (your runoff was gravitational water before it flowed out the bottom of your pot). Plants and microbiology can use this water.
-Capillary water - Water held in the soil by capillary pressure. This is the water that stays in the pot after you water. Plants and micro organisms can use this water.
-Hygroscopic water- This water is very strongly held to soil particles by surface forces. It cannot be removed from soil without applying heat. Plants cannot use this water (they will wilt even though the water is present). However, SOME microbiology CAN in fact survive with the help of this layer of "moisture".
I prefer to play it safe and water while there is still some capillary water present. If the pot still has a little heft to it, and you can feel ANY moisture with your finger, capillary water is still present.
Lol you my friend are the one of the biggest trolls here on this forum, you even changed your picture to a troll. at least everyone gets a heads up now lol.
Lol your soil does get dry, you just don’t know. Did you not read the same post on here that I quoted.. lol. You might want to read the other peoples posts on here too, see what they say.The right moisture levels are paramount to growing in living soil if your soil becomes to dry you will lose biology also your soil structure has to be right in the first Instant i hand water in 15 gallon fabric pots but I couldn’t live with out my blumat sensor View attachment 4707566
I can give you 2 points right now that I bet you will not find proof for anywhere just let me know if you want them.The right moisture levels are paramount to growing in living soil if your soil becomes to dry you will lose biology also your soil structure has to be right in the first Instant i hand water in 15 gallon fabric pots but I couldn’t live with out my blumat sensor View attachment 4707566