amazingsandlad
Member
I like this thread - good discussion.
I'd just like to point out that "nature" is an open system - rain does "flush" the soil it falls on, dissolving water soluble chemicals (organic or not, yes chemicals do exist naturally in nature) on its way down and out of reach of plant roots, all the way to the watertable. It's a constant cycle. Growing in pots is a closed system, what you put there stays there in one form or another unless you get rid of it, e.g. by flushing.
Jack, can you tell me how long it takes microbial activity to produce nutrients in soil to concentrations usable by the plants growing in it? If you were to flush all water soluble elements from an organic soil with a flood of water, how long would it take the microbes in the soil to break down whatever it is organic growers use as a precursor so that nutrients are again available to the plant roots? Not trying to argue anything here, I just don't know.
For the record, I'm in the no-flush-till-2-weeks-before-harvest camp, and I use the FoxFarm line of nutes (just the big 3, GB, BB & TB) with molasses in soil-less mix. Occasional foliar feeding with Ca/Mg as needed. And the flush I use isn't really a flush, more of a 2-stage watering. Saturate the soil but not to run-off, wait about ten minutes to give the water-soluble elements built up in the soil time to dissolve, then water again to a fair bit of run-off (but nowhere near a gallon or twice the volume of the plant's container of water or whatever most people mean by a "real" flush). Works for me, but I'm always up for some re-education.
I'd just like to point out that "nature" is an open system - rain does "flush" the soil it falls on, dissolving water soluble chemicals (organic or not, yes chemicals do exist naturally in nature) on its way down and out of reach of plant roots, all the way to the watertable. It's a constant cycle. Growing in pots is a closed system, what you put there stays there in one form or another unless you get rid of it, e.g. by flushing.
Jack, can you tell me how long it takes microbial activity to produce nutrients in soil to concentrations usable by the plants growing in it? If you were to flush all water soluble elements from an organic soil with a flood of water, how long would it take the microbes in the soil to break down whatever it is organic growers use as a precursor so that nutrients are again available to the plant roots? Not trying to argue anything here, I just don't know.
For the record, I'm in the no-flush-till-2-weeks-before-harvest camp, and I use the FoxFarm line of nutes (just the big 3, GB, BB & TB) with molasses in soil-less mix. Occasional foliar feeding with Ca/Mg as needed. And the flush I use isn't really a flush, more of a 2-stage watering. Saturate the soil but not to run-off, wait about ten minutes to give the water-soluble elements built up in the soil time to dissolve, then water again to a fair bit of run-off (but nowhere near a gallon or twice the volume of the plant's container of water or whatever most people mean by a "real" flush). Works for me, but I'm always up for some re-education.