Do some cultivars prefer synthetic nutes?

JimmyJackCorn

Well-Known Member
This is the direction I'm headed as well, folks.

I saw someone here putting together a living soil bed in their tent by starting with logs found at the river. At that moment, I knew what I was building up to. I even started saving my own big chunks of old wood.

I don't know how big I'll go yet. It would be awesome to have fresh herbs, tomatoes, and peppers year-round as well! It'll take a new tent, another light, a spouse on board....

For now, just waiting for my clover seed to arrive!
 

Apalchen

Well-Known Member
You can take the same cut and run it in 5 different gardens and get 5 different results. Every variable has an impact. From the medium, any inputs, environment and lighting, watering habits.

I just switched to leds and changed my light cycle to 11/13 and my environment to more closely follow vpd and plants I’ve been growing for a year or more look and perform completely different. Some way better and others not quite as good.

It’s best not to get hung up on having a specific strain and instead grab a variety and see what performs and finishes best in your garden and keep those. I bought 13 breeder cuts a few runs back and only still have like 2 of them around.
 

m4s73r

Well-Known Member
This is the direction I'm headed as well, folks.

I saw someone here putting together a living soil bed in their tent by starting with logs found at the river. At that moment, I knew what I was building up to. I even started saving my own big chunks of old wood.

I don't know how big I'll go yet. It would be awesome to have fresh herbs, tomatoes, and peppers year-round as well! It'll take a new tent, another light, a spouse on board....

For now, just waiting for my clover seed to arrive!
Sounds like my HugelKulture bed.
 
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