strain brain
Member
i have done a few grows in the past couple of years and i have always wanted to try growing without nutrient but am scared about the outcome
reply if yous can help
reply if yous can help
While not popular on this particular forum, there are a large number of growers, cannabis, personal and commercial vegetable gardens, decorative gardens, a wide rage of agricultural crops and golf courses, that don't use nutrient supplements. Properly prepared organic growing media requires only water and microbe renewal to consistently outproduce chemical and organic nutrient supplemented outdoor yields. While I haven't grown indoors for years other than getting a head start on plants to be raised outdoors, there are many growers on other forums who do grow organically indoors without commercial nutrient supplements and their yields are impressive.everything needs food to live MJ is no different. there are organic nutrients on the market that will give you zero nute taste when smoked.
I'm running something very similar and we're 100% on the same page here.I don't add nutrients. I use an organic grow medium of 25% fortified potting soil (fir bark, forest humus, peat moss, perlite, chicken manure, worm castings, bat guano, kelp meal, alfalfa meal, oyster shell and dolomite lime), 25% peat moss, 25% decomposed cow manure and 25% perlite. I then use an AACT tea at the beginning of vegetation and one after flowering has begun. The soil food web the complex world of soil-dwelling organisms whose interactions create a nurturing environment for plants.
I suggest you read 'Teaming with Microbes' and you'll never look back at the marketing hype filled world of expensive nutrient supplements. Small book, written in easy to understand layman terms and less expensive than a bottle of highly advertised and overrated nutrients.
He won't get far with an inert soil. Hopefully he's doing some research on how to prepare it to avoid remaining in the commercial nute loop craze. I have enough plants to drive me crazy if I had to mix/add nutes in adhering to a feeding schedule. Especially during summer heat.I'm running something very similar and we're 100% on the same page here.
Making a complete soil so that nothing, or very little needs to be added isn't hard and with the organics is better all the way around.
This, I hope, is what the OP intended, but I got the impression he was thinking of no nutes period and just using an inert soil. Hope I'm wrong about that.
Wet
I don't add nutrients. I use an organic grow medium of 25% fortified potting soil (fir bark, forest humus, peat moss, perlite, chicken manure, worm castings, bat guano, kelp meal, alfalfa meal, oyster shell and dolomite lime), 25% peat moss, 25% decomposed cow manure and 25% perlite. I then use an AACT tea at the beginning of vegetation and one after flowering has begun. The soil food web — the complex world of soil-dwelling organisms whose interactions create a nurturing environment for plants.
I suggest you read 'Teaming with Microbes' and you'll never look back at the marketing hype filled world of expensive nutrient supplements. Small book, written in easy to understand layman terms and less expensive than a bottle of highly advertised and overrated nutrients.
Well, I bought teeming with microbes and I've just started reading it. I really never thought my little hobby would come to this!I don't add nutrients. I use an organic grow medium of 25% fortified potting soil (fir bark, forest humus, peat moss, perlite, chicken manure, worm castings, bat guano, kelp meal, alfalfa meal, oyster shell and dolomite lime), 25% peat moss, 25% decomposed cow manure and 25% perlite. I then use an AACT tea at the beginning of vegetation and one after flowering has begun. The soil food web the complex world of soil-dwelling organisms whose interactions create a nurturing environment for plants.
I suggest you read 'Teaming with Microbes' and you'll never look back at the marketing hype filled world of expensive nutrient supplements. Small book, written in easy to understand layman terms and less expensive than a bottle of highly advertised and overrated nutrients.
I KNOW THIS IS AN old thread really thinking about going organic next time around this might be a dumb question is fox farm organic or is it chemical sorry noob anyways if you are still around thanksWhile not popular on this particular forum, there are a large number of growers, cannabis, personal and commercial vegetable gardens, decorative gardens, a wide rage of agricultural crops and golf courses, that don't use nutrient supplements. Properly prepared organic growing media requires only water and microbe renewal to consistently outproduce chemical and organic nutrient supplemented outdoor yields. While I haven't grown indoors for years other than getting a head start on plants to be raised outdoors, there are many growers on other forums who do grow organically indoors without commercial nutrient supplements and their yields are impressive.
One can choose to play the nutrient supplement game or do some research and ignore it. Organically grown consumables always bring a premium price over their chemically supplemented counterparts, and always taste better, even cannabis. As to cost, to build my AACT brewer and purchase organic tea supplies that will last 3-4 years cost me less than one season of nutrient supplements. Water, neem oil and two tea applications are all the necessities and supplements I need for the entire growing season.
To each his/her own.