Jay Johnson
Active Member
Alright...can i just water in some lime? i thought that because the sunshine #4 said it had lime, that i'd be good for awhile.
You could, but it's much better to add to the mix.Alright...can i just water in some lime? i thought that because the sunshine #4 said it had lime, that i'd be good for awhile.
Hey Wet, your words are always wisdom.You could, but it's much better to add to the mix.
Again, it's *crushed rock*, very slow release and is not going to hurt anything. Mix it in and fuggetabout it. It doesn't dissolve in water, not many rocks do.
Quit over thinking it.
Wet
Could very well be. My 'ground' lime from Lowes is about the consistency of flour. I would bet there are even smaller particles in there that would be available real quick.Hey Wet, your words are always wisdom.
I do have a bone to pick though, with lime.
I understand the logically sure, its a rock so you figure it would take awhile to break down...sure.
But in observation I mixed a batch of recycled dirt and skipped out on the lime thinking "hey its slow release I dont want a buildup now do I" since I always mix it in.
That batch had MAJOR issues with cmag defs. Fought those for awhile with liguid since I didnt want to screw with the mix.
On the next run I had a few plants still in that batch of dirt and pleanty in a new batch with lime, the stuff in new dirt did fine but the ones in the old batch started showing issues as soon as they got three weeks into veg, since I was confident on the cause at this point I when ahead and top dressed and watered the guys hurting with 2 tbl of lime each. Within two days it was almost like it never happend, plants new leaf edges started coming out perfect again, all cupping stopped etc.....
So my observation says Lime is useful much faster then I think people are giving it credit for.
THoughts?