may be helpful to keep in mind hat every garden/er is different. difficult to have a generalized standard when nothing is general or standard about the vast array of different garden/er/s presented here.Hey sorry, just some of the out of the blue answers are BS along with the one's here trying to play monitor.
No mention of some not flushing and taking the nutes right to the end with no lose in taste or high.
"What medium am I growing in" was one question and it's in the hydro section should tell you some of the factors.
No, most of the help sounds more like, " here let me help you fuck up your grow"
No one even tried to ask me what the variable where just outrageous stories of over dosing a grow and baking them with excessive heat.
Hey sorry, just some of the out of the blue answers are BS along with the one's here trying to play monitor.
Hey sorry, just some of the out of the blue answers are BS along with the one's here trying to play monitor.
No mention of some not flushing and taking the nutes right to the end with no lose in taste or high.
"What medium am I growing in" was one question and it's in the hydro section should tell you some of the factors.
No, most of the help sounds more like, " here let me help you fuck up your grow"
No one even tried to ask me what the variable where just outrageous stories of over dosing a grow and baking them with excessive heat.
Dude. Seriously. Read your posts. You asked for help. You gave very little info and no picture and asked for a definitive answer? You then mock and ridicule those who try to help?
You totally picked the right Avatar.
Isn't it about time for your catch phrase?
may be helpful to keep in mind hat every garden/er is different. difficult to have a generalized standard when nothing is general or standard about the vast array of different garden/er/s presented here.
the max temp for YOUR garden will be what ever temp YOUR plants can w/stand, or thrive in. i.e., that flash point, or critical path, has to be tested and found by YOU. doesnt matter what purpledomgoddes, or any other member says, YOUR plants will tell you whether it is too hot or not.
some say 78*f is THE ideal temp for indoor gardening. here, temps are started @ 78 - and go all over the place - depending on stage of growth/maturity.
the domain and range of plants is very wide. they can be acclimated to equatorial jungles, high plains, deep valleys, rain forests, deserts, mountains - and millions of different climates in individual homes (indoor gardens). unless/until a full sample of this data is tested, then conclusions MAY be arbitrary.
in this imaginary garden, would never want temps below 80-85*f w/ lights on. stabilized @ ~78-88*f w/ lights off. only get down to 60*f to trigger particular reaction in plant - then back up to higher temps.
now understand what you mean about not flushing... forgive for not reading more clearly.
have went entire grow w/ gh flora nova bloom (+many additives) w/ out flushing. just fed lightly thru-out grow.
many have tried it w/ success. threads buried on icmag about it. think this thread has "BS" in it? some of those debates (flush vs. not flush) get heated, indeed.
the 1 member on these forums that convinced this gardener that no flush was necessary was growgreen from c.world. the lui sog thread was a classic in the art of mastering your own garden.
whatever temps you choose, or are forced to run due to issues, just keep the air circulation massive. get cheap damp rid dehumidifiers if necessary; but keep the air flowing and dehumidify!
you will be fine.
the key point is to:
enjoy your garden!
Dude no one asked the right questions and neither did you, so your peanut galley comments are just as usless
Never mind I got an answer in a PM elsewhere, no need for anymore smart ass comments ha? ... dude
ohhh goldwing is going far in this forum
I can't believe I got negative rep for calling this assclown a douche.
Me. OP asked a legit question about temps, someone responded to dump h202 and he said thats kinda a knee jerk reactions, why wouldnt you agree? No need to flame the dude over this.
Maybe someone could have pointed out heat causes the edges to curl and explained drooping leaves are usually underwatering? I'm not sure though so I didnt respond, ( its frustrating when you have a dying plant )
Havent tried rapi rooters, maybe someday. Maybe if there was a grow store within a billion miles from me heh.
I need to figure out the proper sequence, please help:
1: lift cube, if light dont water
2: add 10-20ml of water to 1" starter cube, or water until runoff? which one?
3: suck up runoff with syringe and put it into shot glass, measure PH
4: if runoff is high, keep repeating steps 2-4
5: done
And you are to feed at every watering? Or only the first 10-20ml, and then plain water to get runoff? Would you say bringing 150ppm tap water to 200pm would be sufficient for seedlings? How long can they live off plain tap.
On my last batch I got curled over leafs with yellowing tips, definitely N lockout and watering issues, I am concerned now PH also had a play into it because right before they died the leafs exhibited twisting, stem thinning as well. They were hit with .5EC and 1EC nutes though ( 2 different tests )
Cliff notes: Do you water until runoff and what PH do you aim to keep your runoff at. Do you PH your water lower then 5.5 to help keep the PH low ( despite it "damaging rockwool"?, e.g. dustmasters conditioner is ph4 ), do I feed at every watering and how low of an EC does a seedling need. I thought they needed 800ppm but turns out thats tomatoes.
( its frustrating when you have a dying plant )
Ay why dont you mind your own business, piss off and goto hell.
here's his last thread and problems he's having
2 faced. 2 faced. 2faced.. hahMy water for soil is stabilized at 6.2 to 6.3, TDS measures abuut 175 out of the tap.
How soon do I nute the water?
And with how much of what - and what pH for seedlings
I've reviewed threads on Rockwool and PBP - and will be reviewing again - I don't think I can endure another gardening catastrafee any time soon.
What am I forgetting?
Missing?
I know it's asking alot, but could I get some extra guidance and support?
This "Dro" stuff is scarry to ol dirt types just getting thier feet wet for the first time - and seedling are soo touchy.
?And for U lysol - this is what rockwool SHOULD look like
?loose the butthead attitude
Last summer I had a sick garden - a mite outbreak. a thrip outbreak, and several assorted problems, heat, defective pH tester, then another defective pH tester I'm so scared to do anything because everything seems wrong