now your brain is working correctly!my brain just kicked into gear and i think i have realised that i am costantly going to be trying to fend off defficiancy of one or another with my soil mix.. fuck
Really? I've considered this in the past but was always hesitant. What do you use and how do you get the roots out? By the time I harvest a plant the soil and roots are just one huge mass really. The roots are so intertwined it seemed to tedious to separate the soil from the roots.i been reusing my bag soil for years now. i just add things back into it and its great again.
If you get to mixing your own soil, you will want a soil shifting screen... You just throw the root balls on the sifting screen, smush them into it, then sift.Really? I've considered this in the past but was always hesitant. What do you use and how do you get the roots out? By the time I harvest a plant the soil and roots are just one huge mass really. The roots are so intertwined it seemed to tedious to separate the soil from the roots.
Ok i have two auto mazar in pots waiting to surface. i used good quality moss peat with a 30% vermiculite mix. is this good! heard maybe not, im worried now. ???
the best soil growers in the world recycle their soil. there is just no efficient reason to keep buying dirt.Really? I've considered this in the past but was always hesitant. What do you use and how do you get the roots out? By the time I harvest a plant the soil and roots are just one huge mass really. The roots are so intertwined it seemed to tedious to separate the soil from the roots.
you are right. thats why we gotta get him into a better medium. there is just not enough aeration in that mix plus the ph wont hold up in peat.Peat and vermiculite sounds like a recipe for perpetual dampness.
at 25-30% vermiculite,perlite, there is plenty of aeration. what do you think pro-mix is, a ratio of 70-80%peat, 20-30% perlite,vermiculite. Plus with added limestone and a good amount of humus, PH will be no problem. i use a mix similar to 70peat/30 perlite,vermiculite, with compost, lime and azomite along with amendments and my soil mix feeds my girls just like the expensive stuff. as far as PH, i use liquid fish and roots HPK, and never PH'd anything and have not have 1 problem ever . in a healthy organic soil that has been buffered, ph is irrelevant.you are right. thats why we gotta get him into a better medium. there is just not enough aeration in that mix plus the ph wont hold up in peat.
yes you are 100% correct on that one. good post!in a healthy organic soil that has been buffered, ph is irrelevant.
yes you are 100% correct on that one. good post!
however peat moss is no where near a healthy organic soil. pro-mix is a lil better because it has more aeration and lime added to the peat base. by itself it has the ability to buffer the ph to the sweet range for a short time. (over time the lime breaks down an gets used , then you will have to add more to keep the peat from fuckin up the ph)
peat moss , by itself will buffer the ph to around 4-5 , thats just not gonna work.
in your situation joe , you are creating a healthy organic soil by adding all the good organic matter which gives you all the nutes, microbes, fungus , humus, ect... needed to make a good dirt. without the amendments though, i would have to say i hate promix for organics. it can work fine , but its just much better to add the good stuff to it or make your own with regular dirt.
i myself never ever ph anything , but we have to remember , that its a very important factor for those who dont use good organic dirt.
soil
yes this is exactly what i was saying. me and wet have been through this long ago." Short answer: Lime will buffer and keep the soil buffered in the *sweet* range of ~6.4-6.8. Any liquid added will be altered to the pH of the soil in a relatively short time. High pH will be brought down and low pH will be brought up to whatever the soils pH is. pH'ng liquids doesn't do squat, except in the short term. Mostly *stoner science*.
Farmers and gardeners adjust and fix the soils pH at the beginning of the season and that's pretty much it. Think they pH thousands of gallons of irrigation water, or nutes, or ????
Even organically, if we grew food according to the way we are told we 'should' grow mj, we couldn't afford to eat.
Let's use a little common sense here.
Wet
will feeding nutes, example lets say tomato food, will that not raise ph. all this ph stuff is over my head i admit, i mean if it does raise it, where does it go thennow your brain is working correctly!
you can raise the ph slightly , but it will take a long time..... months. and then still its gonna try an fight its way back to its natural ph.
ANY bag soil is better then that. you can even use yard dirt , just as long as you add aeration to it.
i been reusing my bag soil for years now. i just add things back into it and its great again.
soil