Ok, so my scanner refuses to produce an image that's legible, so I'll just type out some direct quotes from the article, and if you're interested, I urge you to pick up this month's issue of Skunk magazine and read for yourself.
Here are some highlights. Remember, this is all in reference to organic liquid nutes, and not synthetics. Nobody debates the fact synthetics will hurt organic living soil mixes.
Some direct quotes from "The Rev" in this issues...
"Some mellow chelation happens when you use molasses in a true living organic tea: again, all good at those levels. But whenever you pour on the chelation acids, especially ascorbic acid (vitamin c), humic acid, and fulvic acid, you do some serious harm to the microbial bio-equilibrium of your living container mix by killing many bacteria throughout"
"When you use a regular regiment of highly chelated liquid organic nutrients, in containers, I call that "Soup Style" organics growing. If you try and use that philosophy of force feeding (chelating) the plants using organic acids like humic, fulvic, and ascorbic acids, in a living container soil mix, you will severely damage the whole bio-equilibrium and destroy all the supernatural qualities your livings soil mix would otherwise be capable of."
"When you are growing true living organics style using a living soil mix in your containers, then you DO NOT (emphasis the author's) want to use any heavily chelated liquid organic nutrients on that soil mix, ever, not even once.
"I hear about this problem...the plants seem to starve and yields hurt fairly badly. You are either adding raw phosphorous, or you are killing your microlife with straight chelated liquid nutrient additions..."
"I don't think HPS bulbs work very well with a living soil mix and cannabis when it comes to growing, and especially late flowering. What you are looking for here is a mini version of natural sunlight in your growing lamps, however, since that isn't possible yet, I have found Eye Blue Metal Halide spectrum to be the closest. And it works awesome for flowering; and growing too, when using a living soil mix like true living organics preaches. If you feel the need to use a HPS light, get one that is more balanced with enhanced blue spectrum elements".
Now please don't anyone think this is an attack on the author or the author's philosophy. I'm simply questioning it because it goes against a lot of the principals of organic cannabis cultivation that I've been learning recently, and I want to know if this is sound advice, or just the ramblings of a guy trying to carve out a niche for himself in the cannabis literature world by being different from conventional wisdom. I tend to think it's not the latter, but I can't say it's the former either.
What do you all think?