I use Fox Farm Ocean Forest soil, and was told it is pH'd at 6.3-6.8, so I try to test the feeding solution to 6.6-6.7 which has recently become a pain because I ran out of pH up and down...i have never used baking soda. i was going to put some in my pool to raise the alkalinity which in turn will probly raise the ph. not sure about using for plants.
i tested my water years ago and was good and have never checked it since. i also use the fox farm lineup and i use promix or sunshine mix as a medium and it has dolomite lime in it to help keep every neutral.
what kind of a growing medium are you useing? are you testing the feeding solution or the run off from the container after feeding the plant?
So my best bet would be buying more pH up and down? Or will it actually be good enough @ holding pH to feed my plants?yeah it works well to raise ph, though i'm not sure it will stay long that way. you only need very small amounts of powder. i think it's safe, at least i havent seen any adverse effects.
also, organic and soil nutes usually buffer ph for a higher
I have a bottle of pH down. After all is added I set the water to pH 5.8 (hydro) and over the course of the week it will drift to 6.5 then I drop them back to 5.8. I think a certain degree of pH drift is necessary due to the uptake of nutrients is best within a certain range.So my best bet would be buying more pH up and down? Or will it actually be good enough @ holding pH to feed my plants?
Amen. Thanks SebastienBaking soda is Sodium Bicarbonate, which is a salt. Best not to use it.