Jp.the.pope
Well-Known Member
You are correct sir
Wow, those really pop!flowers i bought my wife,, sitting under some CREE Leds on the kitchen islandView attachment 3908362
So I'm a bit confused on this; do these cover crops add nutes to the soil in a similar way that legumes are nitrogen fixers? Do you till them in at some point? I'm curious about the mechanism involved.I bought a micro clover mix from build a soil. It has like 12 different kinds of seed. All help fix different nutrients.
I'll see if I can find a link. On a side note, all my plants are loving it. Sip and no sip.
Humanrob posted the link. I assumed it was a similar process, if not the same process, to legumes.I think I found it - ?
https://buildasoil.com/products/clover-cover-crop-blend-13-seed-buildasoil-mix-40-clover
Looks awesome.
In my soil I layer the cover crop with Barley mulch. With new pots of no till usually after about the second go around you look underneath and then see the white film. Then the house is a rocking! I just layed down my first layer of mulch over the first cover crop layer tonight, can't wait, the worms were all happy up top too.So I'm a bit confused on this; do these cover crops add nutes to the soil in a similar way that legumes are nitrogen fixers? Do you till them in at some point? I'm curious about the mechanism involved.
My understanding is that clover is a nitrogen fixer like legumes. We use it as a cover crop in our outdoor gardens for areas that we are not using.So I'm a bit confused on this; do these cover crops add nutes to the soil in a similar way that legumes are nitrogen fixers? Do you till them in at some point? I'm curious about the mechanism involved.
I just read a news item that said several States are starting to pay farmers to do cover crops for moisture retention, soil building and to anchor fertilizers so they don't run off into rivers.My understanding is that clover is a nitrogen fixer like legumes. We use it as a cover crop in our outdoor gardens for areas that we are not using.
Ha! You make coffee like me. I use a Chemex on a scale.
Also, don't want the topsoil blowing away.I just read a news item that said several States are starting to pay farmers to do cover crops for moisture retention, soil building and to anchor fertilizers so they don't run off into rivers.
I'm still wondering what the advantage is in keeping the roots out of the res to begin with? I've run RDWC for a long time and roots in the res was kinda the whole point!Check this out. I just root pruned my fig tree... getting it ready for spring. I lined the entire whiskey barrel with weed cloth and a double layer of weed cloth on the bottom, but check out how aggressive the fig roots are. This tree has been in this pot for three years and the roots grew right through the fabric. Just goes to show you can't fight the roots. They will find the reservoir.
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Three years of uninhibited root growth could maybe clog up the reservoir, overflow holes and fill tube cutting down on water capacity and limiting air intake from the bottom. But, with an annual plant I suppose it really wouldn't be much of an issue. I'm going to omit the weed cloth for my indoor SIPs and see how it goes.I'm still wondering what the advantage is in keeping the roots out of the res to begin with? I've run RDWC for a long time and roots in the res was kinda the whole point!
I suggest top watering them for the first watering in order to start the capillary action, and then rely exclusively on the wicking action after that. I've never used 100% perlite, so I don't know at what rate water will evaporate from the top of the cups and if the top of the cups will dry out too fast. Although, if you room air humidity is up in the 60 - 70% range then I wouldn't think the perlite would dry out too fast.hey guys, forgive me if i am posting in the wrong section, but i am growing a pretty unique style and i think SIP is the most similar concept to mine (capillary action and perlite) so i am hoping you guys can give me your experienced SIP feedback as I am a first-time grower.
I germinated seeds in paper towel and put them in 16 ounce solo cups filled with 100% perlite. These cups have holes in the bottom where 8" long thermolam (fleece) wicks hang out. I drilled three-inch holes in the lid of a Ten-Gallon Tote for the solo cups to sit in. So the solo cups sit in the holes where the wicks hang and soak in 300 PPM jack's+Calcinit solution. So capillary action should pull water up throgh the wicks into the perlite cups.
if you frequent icmag.com you probably know this design as the "PPK Cloner" but has been known to propogate seeds just as well.
Im just wondering if you guys suggest I top water using a kitchen baster once in a while when using this method? if so, how often and how much water at a time (kitchen baster holds one ounce of water btw)? or should i never top water and just let the wicks keep the perlite moist/dry for me? What would my babies appreciate more??
sorry, i am a first-time grower and IMO perlite feels drier to the touch than other mediums do so im so tempted to top water. just dont know if its a good idea or how much i should specifically, if so.
ah winter growing inside in the cold... the only time you see the humidifiers lol... also... showing you age with those VHS tapes in the previous post hahaha... just joshing ya... welcome to the thread! beautiful plants!SIPs otherwise I'm just a jerk bragging about coffee.....
Cover crop is holding in all moisture big sips ftw
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areo press is the only way to fly man! LOVE mine!Ha! You make coffee like me. I use a Chemex on a scale.
Hesus christ man! you are literally growing TREES!? that's awesome! i need to get off my ass dang I'm slacking...Check this out. I just root pruned my fig tree... getting it ready for spring. I lined the entire whiskey barrel with weed cloth and a double layer of weed cloth on the bottom, but check out how aggressive the fig roots are. This tree has been in this pot for three years and the roots grew right through the fabric. Just goes to show you can't fight the roots. They will find the reservoir.
View attachment 3909509
i would just use hempy bucket logic on something like thishey guys, forgive me if i am posting in the wrong section, but i am growing a pretty unique style and i think SIP is the most similar concept to mine (capillary action and perlite) so i am hoping you guys can give me your experienced SIP feedback as I am a first-time grower.
I germinated seeds in paper towel and put them in 16 ounce solo cups filled with 100% perlite. These cups have holes in the bottom where 8" long thermolam (fleece) wicks hang out. I drilled three-inch holes in the lid of a Ten-Gallon Tote for the solo cups to sit in. So the solo cups sit in the holes where the wicks hang and soak in 300 PPM jack's+Calcinit solution. So capillary action should pull water up throgh the wicks into the perlite cups.
if you frequent icmag.com you probably know this design as the "PPK Cloner" but has been known to propogate seeds just as well.
Im just wondering if you guys suggest I top water using a kitchen baster once in a while when using this method? if so, how often and how much water at a time (kitchen baster holds one ounce of water btw)? or should i never top water and just let the wicks keep the perlite moist/dry for me? What would my babies appreciate more??
sorry, i am a first-time grower and IMO perlite feels drier to the touch than other mediums do so im so tempted to top water. just dont know if its a good idea or how much i should specifically, if so.
Figs like their roots restricted a bit, so they do okay in pots.Hesus christ man! you are literally growing TREES!? that's awesome! i need to get off my ass dang I'm slacking...