haole420
Active Member
That's an idea, but it's not easy to dial it in to exactly where you want it. With perpetual, even if you pluck some, the others will still be sucking up nitrates, so it would take a lot to push nitrates to a high enough level to lockout other stuff. Also, all your plants would be locked out, not just the ones your trying to flush.A couple ideas for you after reading your summary. About the nitrate uptake, could trimming the plant heavily be a good way to cause a lockout and be used to flush at the end of flowering? I ask this because I am thinking a perpetual grow may work out very well to keep a constant uptake of nitrates going on in the grow beds. The only downside I see to perpetual is not being able to flush the plants at the end of flowering. Planting clones into the system at three or four intervals will keep a constant plant load coming into and out of flowering.
Goes back to the debate of importance of flushing vs curing. Personally, i think its all in the cure. Nit saying that flushing doesn't so anything, just that if you cure properly, it's unnecessary.
Couldn't find any aquarium products that neutralize nitrates. Only way is to dump some water, add more plants (maybe "helper" crop of greens or herbs), or add anaerobic zones in which the microbes turn nitrates into n2 gas and methane.
Planning to add an anaerobic digester before next round.