increasing the calcium ppm in the coco should have a positive effect on the plants, you need to keep a balance in the Coco, each brand is different and may require less or more calcium to achieve equilibrium. even a flush of low feed should have calmag to maintain the equilibrium . its possible the excess is from the coco and not from the feed. best to try both remedies, either way you gotta keep the coco buffered. flushing out more calcium may add additional problems, here's a link
Learn why you need additional Cal/Mag when growing in coco coir. Covers the role of cation exchange & offers simple instructions to avoid Cal/Mag problems
www.cocoforcannabis.com
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That site is not the holy grail. There is quite a bit of information on there that I don't follow and never have any issues growing in coco.
That particular section you linked to is incorrect. I've been growing in coco for years and have never used calmag and I never have any calcium deficiencies. Things are not just black and white. While calmag may be required when using many cannabis specific nutrients that are lacking in calcium, many other nutrients will provide all the calcium needed. If you're using a product similar to Jacks, Masterblend or other fully balanced nutrient combinations that use calcium nitrate calmag is not needed. The calcium nitrate contains all the calcium needed.
Another section i disagree with is where they state that watering to runoff daily is required to grow in coco is incorrect as well. I use blumats and never have any runoff for an entire grow. The plants grow healthy the entire time. Also, bottom watering with the use of capillary mats has been used in nurseries for decades and today are being used in large scale commercial cannabis grow operations. My next endeavor is to get away from the individual blumats and just use a fabric pots of coco sitting on a capillary mat. Being bottom watered there is never any runoff yet it's a method used in nurseries around the world without having issues from salt buildup or nutrient deficiencies.
With many cannabis production operations in non-traditional spaces such as warehouses, cultural guidelines can be constantly in flux. Even in greenhouse operations, cannabis cultivation requires the careful attention and detail that all indoor growing crops require. For many cultivators...
gpnmag.com
That site may have some decent information and is a good place to start but it's full of information that I have found to be unnecessary. I'm not going to get into all the links for products on Amazon that have them as a referral. But in my years of growing in coco I've defied quite a bit of what's on that site and have grown nothing but healthy plants. I'm not knocking the guys that run that site but there is information that is outdated and proven to be incorrect. They don't compensate for the various methods and ways people feed their plants or what they feed. It's "This is how we do it so consider it fact" when in fact it isn't.
My intention is not to start any type of argument but more to point out that you can grow lush healthy plants in coco without following much of what is on that site.