I had the same run-off problem but due to caustic nature of garden lime i have never been keen on using it on something that goes down my already sore throat....add garden lime to your soil mix..problem solved..you can also get dolomite lime mix it with your water and put some around the plant and mix it into the top layer of soil..this will raise the PH of your soil and it WILL NOT GO OVER seven..your ph run off with lime will normally be just under 7 or right about that...
do this here for the next couple of waterings and u will get that prob taken care of..add garden lime to your soil mix..problem solved..you can also get dolomite lime mix it with your water and put some around the plant and mix it into the top layer of soil..this will raise the PH of your soil and it WILL NOT GO OVER seven..your ph run off with lime will normally be just under 7 or right about that...
since when? people also grow with dirt outside. your point?using lime in growing is generally done on outdoor grows.
okay so he should let all kinds of unsoluble nutrients build up in the soil so when his PH finally does get fixed his plants will burn upunless your plants are displaying some sort of deficiency, don't sweat it.
The only ph that matters is root zone ph. what u add is only going to be an adjustment to the actual root zone ph. if his run off is 5 the root zone ph is right there also. with a ph that low, in order to get healthy plant you will have to drasticaly over feed. then nutrients will build up causing the ph to fluctuate even more at the root zone. what you told him "don't sweat it" would have stunted his plants by starving them now, or burning them up in two weeks. costing him 1/8 of his harvest. don't sweat that.as long as you're properly ph'ing everything that goes in/on your plants, you should be good.
what does this even mean? do you mean never adjust for PH. so all the scientific studies that prove a proper ph is the key to big buds and flowers, and lawns, and trees, and, and, and, all them studies are wrong?you should never chase ph
how am i heckling, just trying to teach what i have learned, u know, i gotta pay it forward from the people who taught me.ooooh, a heckler! you're wasting your time junior, i don't get mad at folks like you.
chasing ph, sorry i dont get all my technique or my slang from the internet, i actually grow the product to test shit out for myself. if u grow like i do u never have to chase ph, because its always in check.if you don't know what chasing ph means, then anyone reading this should ignore any/all of your further posts.no commenthey big b, as i said, if your plants aren't displaying any deficiencies, you're good. when i was in soil (i grow in coco now) i was wigging about the same thing.
yes they will if u over feed to adjust for an already low PH. why would anyone need to rinse off excess nutes if they aren't already over feeding, i will repeat the word "excess" from your statement. a properly ph'd and properly fed plant will never have excess nutes.then i started allowing runoff. this runoff is going to contain excess nutes that have a tendency to accumulate in your medium. this is the reason your runoff is low.
yes a lot of newbs do it because they havent learned proper feeding technique.this is why a lot of folks do the feed, feed, flush regimen.
sounds like a good way to soak your medium. no wonder we see so many people overwatering on here. i really think u should stop now. your techniques are rookie techniques. grow up and move on to actually understanding the plant insteead of being hard headed. i used to think just like u 5 years ago. then i decided to understand the feeding process, and how nutrients react with ph. thats what this is about, right? learning and getting better at what u do. atleast to me it is. for u it seems more of "i harvested once like that before so that must be the way".if you allow runoff when you feed/water, you don't need to do the flush part until harvest
i know all i need to know about the potential for hydrogen. that is what ph means. i'm in coco, so it's important to me for good results. if you want, you can scroll back and read it, lol. as mentioned, do what works for you.Silky- put the crackpipe down man you sound like a damn fool....and trust me ph of runoff is very important because the root zone ph is what determines nutrient uptake and lockout issues
i've had some get away from me. those monsters yield!Ok I realize this is an old possibly abandoned thread but I want to retract the irration in my response to to Silky:
hey dude, don't sweat it, lol! it's a good thread with drama and everything!!! there's "always" more than one way to skin a cat, lol.
( To correct you can adjust your nutrient solution going in to make up for the drop.)
this is what is called "chasing ph." this method works, but is a giant pain in the ass and time consuming. everything is ph'd (in soil) in the 6.5 range. feeding once weekly until you get some run-off, and plain ph'd water in-between (with run-off) is the method i use. i copied bog's methods. if your plants are looking good, then you continue the routine. if they start displaying some def's, then you respond to that.
When I grow in rockwool and recirculate my res I really don't have any problem with fluctuation...the ph going in is the same as the ph going out. But my current grow is five monster plants growing in sunshine mix number #4 and there can be some fluctuation between 5.4 and 6.5. Doesn't seem to pose a problem as the plants are monsters. In fact I have one plant that was fim'd 4 times while it vegged for 3 months. Then I bent all the main branches down until I had some creases in the branches. It turned into a monster spider looking thing with about 200 tops and its 5 ft wide. Anyway...just ramblin- my last crop I grew buds bigger than your head so heres a link