So you prefer plastic pots to grow in so moisture run off only from the bottom and not the sides?That is rather common. Not just for fabric pots either.
Don't let your plants sit IN ANY run off! You can easily get nutrient balance issues and even pH issues.
The plant "knows" there is "moisture" down there. They are stretching to get it.
By the look of the plants....They don't need it either!
I do not like fabric pots. To much wasted media space. To much root ball density in the center.
This causes too much run off and not enough use of the feed by the "umbrella" effect.
This means that you water it and the liquid simply rolls around the root ball (due to how dense it is) and runs out of the sides and bottom of the pot.
The roots are not using the un-rooted space between the roots and the pot walls... That's more then a 20% loss of useable root space.
Bigger roots equal bigger buds.
When I was resting the pots for the first maker. I told him they sucked and why. They never used anything I said in advertising and claims!
Tried soaking the hell out of a plant about to be harvested.
Waited and then chopped.
Dumped out the root ball and cut the dirt in half. The center of the root ball was bone dry.
Go from there.
I don't know about any of this. My entire medium becomes a root mass. I have to cut the pots off and laboriously tear the coco apart.That is rather common. Not just for fabric pots either.
Don't let your plants sit IN ANY run off! You can easily get nutrient balance issues and even pH issues.
The plant "knows" there is "moisture" down there. They are stretching to get it.
By the look of the plants....They don't need it either!
I do not like fabric pots. To much wasted media space. To much root ball density in the center.
This causes too much run off and not enough use of the feed by the "umbrella" effect.
This means that you water it and the liquid simply rolls around the root ball (due to how dense it is) and runs out of the sides and bottom of the pot.
The roots are not using the un-rooted space between the roots and the pot walls... That's more then a 20% loss of useable root space.
Bigger roots equal bigger buds.
When I was resting the pots for the first maker. I told him they sucked and why. They never used anything I said in advertising and claims!
Tried soaking the hell out of a plant about to be harvested.
Waited and then chopped.
Dumped out the root ball and cut the dirt in half. The center of the root ball was bone dry.
Go from there.
This. When grown properly.I don't know about any of this. My entire medium becomes a root mass. I have to cut the pots off and laboriously tear the coco apart.
First off. Hell yes! Why do I want to waste nutrient? Besides, the media dries out faster...So you prefer plastic pots to grow in so moisture run off only from the bottom and not the sides?
Fabric pots are built to "air prune" the roots from around the edge of the pot. Twixt about 1- 1.5 inch's....This. When grown properly.
Yup. You nailed it. Definitely doing something wrong. Lmao. Coming from the guy that said this...Fabric pots are built to "air prune" the roots from around the edge of the pot. Twixt about 1- 1.5 inch's....
In organic "water only" growing....... Your wasting up to and in some case's. Over 20% of your available nutrient rich soil..
If your getting rots out so far that you have to cut off the fabric pot?
Your doing something wrong. Not designed to do that.
My entire pot is roots. Nothing wasted there.I do not like fabric pots. To much wasted media space. To much root ball density in the center.
Ok, sure thing kiddo..My entire pot is roots. Nothing wasted there.
If you grow plants in fabric pots set directly on the ground roots will grow through and into the dirt they're setting on. I grew some tomatoes in fabric pots a few years back. They stayed in the same spot. When I went to move them at the end of the season the pot was stuck to the ground from the roots growing through the bottom.I never knew roots could grow out of a fabric pot like that. I don't know if it's good nor bad. Roots look bright white thats a good sign. Someone should respond. I'm curious as well. I have pot lifters, but normally let me runoff just run onto the floor tray cause only 10 percent runoff of a gallon I use isn't much runoff each watering. Lol
I'm in total agreement with you regarding coco and runoff. It's completely unnecessary but since all the cannabis specific coco sites tell people to do it that's what they do. I've done entire grows using blumats and absolutely no runoff at all. The plants were healthy from start to finish despite never being watered until runoff. There is so much incorrect information floating around the cannabis growing scene that it's surpassing the legitimate good information.First off. Hell yes! Why do I want to waste nutrient? Besides, the media dries out faster...
Why won't that root mass get any benefit of the feed/water in the center?
Why the hell are you watering to run off?
In soil, you never run to run off. Simply water/feed the same metered amount everyday. This amount is enough to get you to the next day to repeat.
Daily watering helps deliver O2 to the roots - LOTS.
Even in Coco you should only have to do a "Run Off" watering on a periodic basis.
Your pouring your expensive nutrients through there and dumping the excess. Waste of money that could be spent in better ways.
You disagree with someone so you try to degrade them and toss out the kiddo insult?Ok, sure thing kiddo..
Coming from the guy that tested them before they went public with them!