LegendaryG
Member
I'm no expert when it comes to the NPK analysis on a specialty bag of soil, but 10 years ago when Vermifire came out, their N level was a solid 2 printed on the front of their bags. Now I see photos of their bags of soil on their website with the NPK number being 1.6-1-.6.
I have been using this soil since they came out always cutting it so it isn't so "hot" and have always had great mostly bug free results for getting plants going.
If you look at their website their bags clearly have printed
1.6-1-.6 for NPK printed directly under the name Vermifire.
The bags I just received don't have any numbers printed on the front anymore, but on the back it says guaranteed analysis 0.17%-0.11%-0.14%.
Am I missing something here or is Vermifire lacking the "fire" it used to have? Am I supposed to believe they have "watered down" the recipe with coco and perlite or am I missing something about the mysteriously disappearing numbers from the front of the bag and leaving only the analysis on the back.
This is an extremely important topic for me because I have no way of getting good bag soil where I live for indoor growing. Shipping is so high that the only soil that makes sense to pay $50 a bag including shipping is and always has been the "hot" Vermifire. That way I can go to the local feed store and "cool" the soil down with pro-mix and turn 1 bag of soil into 3. What am I missing here? Do the numbers they print on the front not have to correlate with the guaranteed analysis?
I asked Hawthorne(the producers of Vermicrop products) and they told me that eventually the NPK numbers are going to be removed from ALL bagged potting soils because there is no way to keep it the same batch to batch. I asked if the bags of soil I just received that have a guaranteed N analysis of 0.17% will be as hot as the bags of soil I used 10 years ago that had an N level of 2 and he said yes. Is it possible they are just switching up compost for more slow release chemical fertilizers? I understand that guaranteed analysis is what is available asap to the plants, but this does make me wonder. Please, if anyone knows, chime in before I lose some of the most legendary strains in existence.
I have been using this soil since they came out always cutting it so it isn't so "hot" and have always had great mostly bug free results for getting plants going.
If you look at their website their bags clearly have printed
1.6-1-.6 for NPK printed directly under the name Vermifire.
The bags I just received don't have any numbers printed on the front anymore, but on the back it says guaranteed analysis 0.17%-0.11%-0.14%.
Am I missing something here or is Vermifire lacking the "fire" it used to have? Am I supposed to believe they have "watered down" the recipe with coco and perlite or am I missing something about the mysteriously disappearing numbers from the front of the bag and leaving only the analysis on the back.
This is an extremely important topic for me because I have no way of getting good bag soil where I live for indoor growing. Shipping is so high that the only soil that makes sense to pay $50 a bag including shipping is and always has been the "hot" Vermifire. That way I can go to the local feed store and "cool" the soil down with pro-mix and turn 1 bag of soil into 3. What am I missing here? Do the numbers they print on the front not have to correlate with the guaranteed analysis?
I asked Hawthorne(the producers of Vermicrop products) and they told me that eventually the NPK numbers are going to be removed from ALL bagged potting soils because there is no way to keep it the same batch to batch. I asked if the bags of soil I just received that have a guaranteed N analysis of 0.17% will be as hot as the bags of soil I used 10 years ago that had an N level of 2 and he said yes. Is it possible they are just switching up compost for more slow release chemical fertilizers? I understand that guaranteed analysis is what is available asap to the plants, but this does make me wonder. Please, if anyone knows, chime in before I lose some of the most legendary strains in existence.