keebod.dobeek
Active Member
Hello,
I've been growing trees in 100% coco-peat till now without any issues. The pot would be real light, and easy to move around as coco-peat is very light compared to soil. Apart from that there wont be earthworms or any critters interested in living inside it, so no worries while working with it without any gloves on hands. This tree business is because of my interest in the art of bonsai.
Anyway, my doubt was about how good is 100% coco-peat in regards to cannabis plant? Very low rate of germination with bagseed tests, as most get rotten away. Coco-peat holds moisture on sunny days for at least 3 days, and fourth day onwards the topmost layer would slightly start drying, and no watering is required for at least 7 days as just the topmost layer is what dries and just a centimeter down there would be that dark colored coco-peat which is wet.
I used those ice tray like things which come in black color for the germination test. These are specifically made for germination of veggies like chillies, tomatoes, eggplants and so on. We don't have those canna professional series kinda high-end coco stuff here, but coming from a place thats named after the coconut trees, I never felt brands do matter as its the same coconut tree's coconut's shell/husk is torn apart and the fibres are whats chopped/powdered to make those coco-peat blocks.
I put one 6 kilogram block of cocopeat in a real tall laundry bucket filled with water, waited till it transforms into that fluffy texture once water is absorbed. Then took sufficient amount of it and filled the seed planting trays.
Took a matchstick and made 1cm holes on all the filled tray holes, and dropped the seed in it, covered it with the cocopeat around the hole. You know just pushing around the hole will get it covered. Used a dropper and dropped water till it starts draining down the holes below the trays. Thats it. No watering after that.
Even after a week when the seeds don't pop out, I was irritated, and poked out the seeds with a matchstick, and saw all were rotten! Not really all, but most of them. Some where just dark, and with a slight press would emit pus like stinky gooey substance.
Anyone ever tried germination in 100% coco-peat? What is the correct process to germinate with 100% cocopeat?
By the way, the following is the weather:
That humidity being 95% is my concern. Its monsoon here, and that high humidity might be why even after seven days, the top never dried up like it would on a sunny day. How should I approach germination with pure coco peat?
Thank You.
I've been growing trees in 100% coco-peat till now without any issues. The pot would be real light, and easy to move around as coco-peat is very light compared to soil. Apart from that there wont be earthworms or any critters interested in living inside it, so no worries while working with it without any gloves on hands. This tree business is because of my interest in the art of bonsai.
Anyway, my doubt was about how good is 100% coco-peat in regards to cannabis plant? Very low rate of germination with bagseed tests, as most get rotten away. Coco-peat holds moisture on sunny days for at least 3 days, and fourth day onwards the topmost layer would slightly start drying, and no watering is required for at least 7 days as just the topmost layer is what dries and just a centimeter down there would be that dark colored coco-peat which is wet.
I used those ice tray like things which come in black color for the germination test. These are specifically made for germination of veggies like chillies, tomatoes, eggplants and so on. We don't have those canna professional series kinda high-end coco stuff here, but coming from a place thats named after the coconut trees, I never felt brands do matter as its the same coconut tree's coconut's shell/husk is torn apart and the fibres are whats chopped/powdered to make those coco-peat blocks.
I put one 6 kilogram block of cocopeat in a real tall laundry bucket filled with water, waited till it transforms into that fluffy texture once water is absorbed. Then took sufficient amount of it and filled the seed planting trays.
Took a matchstick and made 1cm holes on all the filled tray holes, and dropped the seed in it, covered it with the cocopeat around the hole. You know just pushing around the hole will get it covered. Used a dropper and dropped water till it starts draining down the holes below the trays. Thats it. No watering after that.
Even after a week when the seeds don't pop out, I was irritated, and poked out the seeds with a matchstick, and saw all were rotten! Not really all, but most of them. Some where just dark, and with a slight press would emit pus like stinky gooey substance.
Anyone ever tried germination in 100% coco-peat? What is the correct process to germinate with 100% cocopeat?
By the way, the following is the weather:
That humidity being 95% is my concern. Its monsoon here, and that high humidity might be why even after seven days, the top never dried up like it would on a sunny day. How should I approach germination with pure coco peat?
Thank You.