I use those three ingredients with great results.Hey Heisenberg have u seen any difference between using great white,ancient forest, and aquashield in a tea?
Great White or mycogrow soluble (identical products) and perhaps mycomadness are the most diverse products on the market. There are actually a few products which contain 'this or that' strain which isn't included in great white, but the difference is negligible for the purpose of disease prevention, and as I said, the product as a whole still isn't as diverse. For this reason, great white surpasses simpler inoculation products such as ZHO, aquashield, and even the sub-b/m. In short, some products contain only fungi, some contain only bacteria, while products like great white contain both and a more diverse selection of each. Remember, diversity is the key to controlling slime.Hey Heisenberg have u seen any difference between using great white,ancient forest, and aquashield in a tea?
I've been having problems with cyanobacteria in my DWC. My first DWC grow I tried to find a solution and eventually came on this thread. I cleaned my res, lines, drip emitters, pumps, buckets, etc. with 29% h202; I also fixed some light leaks in my res. Despite all this, I had cyanobacteria again in my next grow, and was driven back to the tea. Although my harvest was much better and my plants were much healthier, their roots were still constantly being attacked by the slime, and even the best could have had 3x more root mass.
I'm at a loss now and I could really use some advice.
Is it possible my nutrients are harboring the cyanobacteria?
Should I invest in an aquarium chiller?
Should I just use tea from start to finish?
Is this a problem I can ever get rid of?
hey prince,View attachment 1721584View attachment 1721585
This is after 2 days suddenly i got this
View attachment 1721586 This is a Before shot
I have a whole bunch of the same plant and yet this one the largest is the only showing signs of problems roots still look great
Ph is 5.7
Tds is a little low at 400
R/o Water
RH 35-50%
Rest of the info is in my journal anyone have any advice? Mr bond u better be lurking today
70-75 is an ideal temperature range. microbial activity becomes very inactive below 68F... and temps above 75F are more prone to slime infestation in veg. ive used the tea with ambient temps as high as 100F to keep slime at bay. it wasnt totally effective at 100F, but it was at 94F...Just to clarify. Water temps shouldn't go below 70F and above 75F with the tea correct?
Use the tea from start to finish, although you can slack way off as they get closer to finish. If you do a final flush, leave out bennies during the flush. Do not worry about a chiller, unless you can make one yourself cheaply. Your nutrients are probably not the source of the slime, but they may be exasperating it if they contain anything organic. Once the slime becomes established, it is most likely going to be around forever, and without tea inoculations it will regain a foothold. Many, many people have had terrible cases of slime but with the tea, they grow completely slime free, so there is hope for your setup.Is it possible my nutrients are harboring the cyanobacteria?
Should I invest in an aquarium chiller?
Should I just use tea from start to finish?
Is this a problem I can ever get rid of?
Heisenberg mentions this product earlier in the thread. See below:Hey heisenberg what about myco maDness by humbolt its cheap an avalible in my area? Would this be
Close to the mycogrow you use? The analist is on the humbolt website if you dont mind looking at it
Hey heisenberg what about myco maDness by humbolt its cheap an avalible in my area? Would this be
Close to the mycogrow you use? The analist is on the humbolt website if you dont mind looking at it
Yep, it's a great product, but to clarify, the poster was asking specifically about granular he had lying around. Ideally you want the soluble powder, which contains slightly more beneficial ingredients.Heisenberg mentions this product earlier in the thread. See below:
"Myco Madness: Excellent product containing a diverse collection of bacteria and fungi, including trichoderma. Has a good track record for use in tea. I think the granular would be fine to use in the tea."
mr.bond
Sweet thank heisenYep, it's a great product, but to clarify, the poster was asking specifically about granular he had lying around. Ideally you want the powder.