I've been having problems with tried and true recipes not working. I decided to work exclusively with the Coot recipe and work through the problems I'm having instead of switching to something different every time I have issues.
Eventually, I got around to running soil tests on my peat moss, compost, and EWC inputs and discovered they were so high in nutrients, I was probably having lockout issues. In addition, the Coot recipe recommends additional nutrients even though they are not needed. Plus, he recommends rock dust even though compost and EWC are richer in micronutrients.
So, I cut the organics in half and see promising improvements to my soil profiles. I was just wondering if I had sufficient organic matter for my organic grow (I believe I do). Guess it doesn't matter now since I just started 12/12 and will just have to wait and see how it turns out.
That isn't always a bad thing. Sure, short term it can be "bad" because your results are never truly optimized. However, the constant trying new methods provides insight and information that can only be gained from personal experience. Took me over 5 years to streamline my process, I was constantly trying new things. New lights, new rooms, new strains, you get the idea. Short term, your results will be inconsistent because of this. But in the long term, your results will be better because of all the information one is hopefully absorbing from trying said new methods.
What are you putting in your soil as a top dress, and how much?
How do you water, and how much at a time?
I've yet to encounter excess nutrients in my soil to the point of creating an imbalance. Typically, this happens due to using organic matter high in NPK (Blood/Bone Meals and so forth), and/or excessive top dressing.
Nute lockout in living soil is going to be watering related 9/10 times. Occasionally, lockout will come from excessive over-fertilization, however it is typically an over-watering issue that causes lockouts. Unfortunately, when people notice this lockout, they rarely take a look at their watering practices but instead panic and dump more nutrients in hopes of fixing the issue.