I'll put up pics tonight.
Just did some transplanting this morning. The three girls that are going to be flowered next week went into 3 gallon square pots. I put 1 in. of perelite in the bottom of the pots, followed by a 3:1 blend of Perelite to Pro-mix BX. They were due for a flush, so they just got ph adjusted water today.
The root balls looked good and healthy, so I'm sure they'll move in to their new digs quickly.
I will be switching to 8ml/gal. of Tiger Bloom, along with 30ml/gal. of Big Bloom. I don't use any of the boosters. I have heard good and bad about them. Since this is my first time in a soiless mix, I'll play it conservative. I figure I will be able to quickly add Phosphorus when needed.
I will also start to shift the ph of my ferts down to 5.8 from where it has be at around 6.2 to boost the P uptake. In keeping with my low budget, devil-may-care attitude, I'm still avoiding a Ph meter ($100 each year for 3 plants is too much). I will be using ph tester strips (the ones used for folks concerned about the ph of thier diets). After some research, I found out that the strips work pretty well (brewers use them all the time). The only issue is that the strips tend to read about 0.3 points lower ph than the liquid really is. So, I will be looking for 6.5 on the chart that comes with the strips.
I know the strips won't be as accurate as a meter, but that could actually be a good thing. Hydro folks seem to like to vary the ph a bit from feeding to feeding, since different levels allow for more uptake of different nutrients. Instead of intentionally modifying the ph, I'll let my measurement errors take care of it for me.
I also planted up the outdoor lady! Goddamn, that was a PITA. I send out a lot of respect to guerrilla growers-- dirt is HEAVY.
I dumped about 8 gallons into a burlap sack (Compost, soil, Perelite and Ocean Forest ferts), and lugged it out to my site last night. The site is not far from foot-traffic, but it is very swampy around there, and in order to stay out of sight, I had to go through all sorts of muck. If the soil weren't heavy enough at the start of my trip, it was certainly heavy once I dropped it in the swamp once or twice!
I'll check on it once every month or so, and otherwise just leave it alone-- unless it gets really dry. I give it about a 30% chance of success. It was a great learning process, though, and if it IS sucessful, I hope to get about 4oz off it.