and when there are already enough nutes in the soil/plant. then it can use these. no need to waste resources.You would have to flush a very long time to reverse it
doesn't differentiate between ammonia & nitrate, and is therefore imprecise on N, as it can be in the pot in anionic, cationic or nonionic formThat mulders chart
Ok my bad I should have asked that first, my bottle says 5ml to 5 gallons but it isThe back of my bottle said to do that
My sources on The JokeIts not a joke. It is inconclusive that it affects the overall quality of the final product. If you are growing in a medium, such as CoCo coir, then , flushing near the final week of flower can remove some of the salts that have acquired at the base root level , and, that is never a bad thing. A lot of this depends on the medium you are growing in. So , when you say look it up. Maybe provide your sources that would have you call it a joke.
But how would different forms of N compete with N when K is in abundance?and when there are already enough nutes in the soil/plant. then it can use these. no need to waste resources.
doesn't differentiate between ammonia & nitrate, and is therefore imprecise on N, as it can be in the pot in anionic, cationic or nonionic form
Yea probably.But i definitely lost yields from the overfeeding in week 2. That's for sure
with all the debate lately, this is the best research I've found on flushing.Its not a joke. It is inconclusive that it affects the overall quality of the final product. If you are growing in a medium, such as CoCo coir, then , flushing near the final week of flower can remove some of the salts that have acquired at the base root level , and, that is never a bad thing. A lot of this depends on the medium you are growing in. So , when you say look it up. Maybe provide your sources that would have you call it a joke.
You are spending too much time worrying about bull. You grown out doors for years but don't know what normal is in your grow. Take a walk outside and clear the mind..,I've been growing for 4 years now outdoor in the summer here in Colorado but i decided to grow indoor and everything is going great until i noticed this. What the hell is going on the bud itself looks okay but the leaves? View attachment 4813279View attachment 4813280View attachment 4813285View attachment 4813286View attachment 4813287
Yep that’s one I like and posted above along with the other 3 but people are creatures of habit and most do not like change...with all the debate lately, this is the best research I've found on flushing.
Sorry, I just seen you posted it. I believe it's pretty conclusive. They find almost no benefit to flushing.Yep that’s one I like and posted above along with the other 3 but people are creatures of habit and most do not like change...
Yep and if you pull up the others to see it is not good for your girls in flower but to each their own I fed up to the day I harvest and always get some killer smoke...Sorry, I just seen you posted it. I believe it's pretty conclusive. They find almost no benefit to flushing.
I fed to harvest also. Seems like you'd be robbing them of essential nutes, right when there wanting them the most, right at the end.Yep and if you pull up the others to see it is not good for your girls in flower but to each their own I fed up to the day I harvest and always get some killer smoke...
Well if you want to get real simple, out side growing in the ground they never flush. LolI fed to harvest also. Seems like you'd be robbing them of essential nutes, right when there wanting them the most, right at the end.
That's what I'm always saying, how does nature flush? LolWell if you want to get real simple, out side growing in the ground they never flush. Lol
Potassium is generally found in flowering fertilizers or additives used during the bud fattening phase. An excess of this nutrient can cause nitrogen, calcium or magnesium deficiencies.Don’t mean to nick pick but too much K doesn’t interfere with N it’s the other way.
Flushing at the end of flower to get 'Tastier buds' is a completely different beast than flushing because you've been over feeding and have salt build up making your plant sick because it's over and under nuted at the same timeMy sources on The Joke
High Times Mag did a test study with RX Green Technologies and published a big article on Flushing at end of flower
look it up... Here's another one, https://www.thcfarmer.com/threads/flushing-is-a-bad-practice-based-on-flawed-science.64789/
and another one, https://www.rollitup.org/t/the-truth-about-flushing.409622/ and one more I'm gonna stop at this one https://support.ilovegrowingmarijuana.com/t/to-flush-or-not-to-flush/6432 and
will leave any further article's out there for who ever wants to have a look.
wrong. do a search here for a recent study. flushing is for toilets.It is inconclusive that it affects the overall quality of the final product
That's what I'm always saying, how does nature flush? Lol
That's a really simple question to answer lol, nature flushes because plants are in millions of gallons of dirt, the earth lol, they arent in tiny containers with a limited amount of substrate and water to wash out the salt and residue build-up
But that is what we are talking about during flowering,,, at that point flushing will not give you taster buds, or any of the misconstrued things we’ve always been told it does none of that... But you are right when it comes to PH lock out or too much units then flushing will help reduce the damage if caught soon enough in that case...Flushing at the end of flower to get 'Tastier buds' is a completely different beast than flushing because you've been over feeding and have salt build up making your plant sick because it's over and under nuted at the same time