Next years my first outdoor, I use to grow trees inside. Never grown outside before. I’ll be in a greenhouse with mini splits, a quest and burner.
I’m wasting 500 plant permit in Rockwool cubes when I could be doing trees... if I can do 16-24oz plants inside years ago, I imagine I can do 5-10lb trees outdoors.
I would like to stay comfortable with what I know, using coco/perlite mix in 30 gal pots, I guess my concern is salt buildup and burning. There going out as small bushes though, but I just figured my feedings should be lower outdoors, say 600ppm every watering since the evaporation rate is much faster. Opinions?
Pics of one of my rooms I’m planting today...
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If the outdoor grow is going to be in pots, then use calcium nitrate.
The calcium nitrate will wash through the soil before it becomes a problem, in the pots anyway...
If the outdoor grow is going to be in the ground or raised beds, then use 50:50 calcium nitrate:ammonium sulfate.
This is because the calcium nitrate will get used first and any subsequent nitrate will flow deeper into the soil out of the roots range. The ammonium sulfate will also wash out a little as well but it will remain within the roots range, so it will encourage the roots to grow longer, thus taller plants.
Plus the 50:50 calcium nitrate:ammonium sulfate is a good choice to use during flower, because the plants can still get all the nitrogen they need, but the calcium will be reduced so it won't mess with flower production. You can play around with the ratio of calcium nitrate to ammonium nitrate for your specific strain, because some strains are more sensitive to calcium during flower than others.
Also because ammonium sulfate has an N-P-K of 21-0-0, you don't have to use as much, about 73.8% as much as calcium nitrate (15.5-0-0) and ammonium sulfate tends to cost less as well.
As far as ammonium in hydro, if it's an older system and you don't wash your reservoirs out with bleach or scrub them too much between grows, then there's a good chance you have a healthy population of nitrosomonas (ammonia to nitrite) and nitrobacter (nitrite to nitrate) bacteria which will convert the ammonia to nitrate PDQ.
One other thing you may want to consider for an outdoor grow is green manure.
This can be planted under and around the cannabis and the plants will shade the ground so (other) weeds don't grow. If you use a plant like white clover, this will actually fix nitrogen from the air, so it will cut down a little on the nitrogen you will need for your grows.
I hope that was helpful.