Information on LED lighting says to increase amount of Cal/Mag. I'm having problems with nutrient lock out. I think it's due to the amount of Cal/Mag. Any info on nutrient problems with LED's would be appreciated.
I'm using 600 watt (supposedly) /3X4' scrog tables. Had been using MH/HPS and T-5's with good success. Changed to all LED's for a variety of reasons. I've read to decrease nutes to 1/2 to 1/3 and to increase Ca:Mg (Botanicare Cal/Mag). I had been using 5ml/gal. (I use Ocean Forest and Light Warrior with some perlite). I did that and increased cal mag to 8ml. At about 6 weeks the bottom leaves were turning yellow and dying. It works it's way up the plant. Doing some research it looked like a cal mag deficiency. I increased to 10ml/gal. Nothing changed. Jumped to 15. Now it looks like I killed them.You didn't really tell us anything about your setup, just that you think you're using too much "cal/mag", whatever that is. So you think your Ca:Mg ratio is too high?
I replied to your duplicate thread here. I use LEDs.Hello... is there anybody out there? That grows with LED's
The only problem I had was calmag deficiency became more pronounced midway into flower. That's why I posted to the two links (in duplicate thread) about creating calcium phosphate by dissolving egg shells in white vinegar. Has really helped me.Have you had problems when switching to LED's?
If you're in a hurry to deliver nitrogen, foliar feeding can work awesome. If you were in flower, you'd need to concern yourself with your humidity and risk of bud rot. But, in veg, I'd do it without thinking twice. Not sure bat guano can be foliar fed. Fish emulsion can. Or, people even use household ammonia (you'd need to google about that, concentrations, etc.).Thanks for the egg shell info. I'm going to give it a try. I'm going ahead with feeding more and add some high first number bat guano. I think maybe I've been starving them. You know how they say: Less is best. I've apparently taken it too far.
Also, some strains are reacting more adversely than others. White Rhino for instance, all 4 died. Then the Sky Walker Kush is doing OK.
I probably missed an earlier mention, but what do you recommend as an alternative to the various calmag products people use (in response to the common early- to mid-bloom deficiency, which seems to be exacerbated by LED)?There's no such thing as cal mag.
I probably missed an earlier mention, but what do you recommend as an alternative to the various calmag products people use (in response to the common early- to mid-bloom deficiency, which seems to be exacerbated by LED)?
I've been supplementing 1 Tbsp/gal home-brewed calcium derived from eggshell. That seems to help *a lot*. I haven't had the nerve to stop using Botanicare's CalMag+. I hate to upset what seems to be working well now. But, I'm open to new ideas.
Are you saying I don't need magnesium (the calcium is enough)? Or, that I can acquire it separately (and cheaper) from Epsom salt?
I've been wondering bout the former. I'm getting the impression the dissolved eggshell supplement is giving me what I need, and perhaps Mg deficiencies were just a byproduct of calcium def.
I need more than a periodic table to understand this.
Thanks.
Careful church, your ignorance is showing.
Do you find that that alone answers the common "calmag" deficiency most growers encounter? For example, providing a calcium source, does that affect the magnesium deficiency which seems so common?Calcium nitrate in hydro.
Limestone, bonemeal, or eggshells, in soil.