Thanks all. First grow and plants look great about three feet tall and one week into flower. I am using Alaska Fertilizer Morbloom (0-10-10) mixed with regular Alaskan Fish Fertilizer (5-1-1) at which is organic. I have been watering until heavy seepage is seen through the bottom (about 1 quart) They appear very healthy however. You also recommend I alternate straight watering and fertilizing. I wonder why they don't seem to need the 3 quarts you are suggesting as it would all seep out the bottom (Jerry Garcia)? They haven't wilted to this point ever during the grow. Again thanks all for your help it is appreciated. Please feel to post if you have any other suggestions.
Again, 1 quart per gallon is a good rule of thumb...not necessarily one that needs to be followed to a "T." The reason you give 1 quart per gallon is to ensure you saturate the entire soil mass. Water can easily bypass the soil by traveling down the sides of the pot and out of your drainage holes, which is why it is not necessarily a good idea to judge how watered they are by how much runoff you experience.
Which leads us back to lifting the pot. Give one plant 1 quart of water and another 3 quarts of water. After you're finished, lift each pot, and I assure you the 3 quart pot will be heavier. Why? Because the soil is saturated uniformly throughout the pot.
But a lot of this depends upon the speed at which you deliver your water. If you water very slowly down the base of the stem, it should take a while before you start to see any runoff, because the water is being absorbed by the soil. If you water quickly by dumping large quantities of water at once over the entire surface of the pot, you will get runoff within a couple seconds, as it streams down the sides of your pot and out the drainage holes, much of it missing the soil completely.
The fertilizers you are using should do just fine, though I only have experience with the 5-1-1 alaskan fish emulsion as a veg nute and occasional flower supplement. It is harder to burn a plant using organics, especially using fish ferts, so if you have been fertilizing with every watering it's probably not the end of the world. But again, it's easy for salts to slowly accumulate in the soil, which is why a straight (pH adjusted if necessary) water only feeding is recommended between fertilizer feedings.