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| Forums > Marijuana Growing > Nutrients and Fertilizers > ORGANIC VS INORGANIC. The great debate. | ||
| ORGANIC VS INORGANIC. The great debate. | Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
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#41 | |
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Well maybe I wasn't clear about the taste difference with flush. There is less chlorophyll in a flushed bud. The longer you flush the more pale it will get. I don't think chlorophyll tastes all that great. So let me clarify. I could get the exact same taste with no flush and a longer cure. Or I can flush two weeks and it is smooth and better than most at 8 days post harvest! Why would I want to cure for 30-40 days when I don't have to? Why do we cure bud? To break down chlorophyll so it is not so harsh right? Well I choose to reduce the chlorophyll by flushing and hardly need a cure for really smooth smoking flowers. Chlorophyll is the only thing I care about. I don't care what color the damn ash is if it tastes great and smokes smooth. Weed in a jar don't pay the electric bill lol. |
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#42 |
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Overfertilization happens with both O and IO, just easier to avoid with IO hydro. When you know what you're doing.
Properly grown hydro requires what? 5 days to flush unused nutrients out? Properly, meaning we're not trying to flush out built up stuff which isn't going anywhere. Proper, meaning you're giving the plant only what it wants as it declines toward harvest. |
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#43 | |
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I learned in college that plants take up nutrients the same way whether they are O or IO. So I agree with the above statement. I have also been growing weed for more than 3 decades in soil (except I clone/root in hydro), and have grown both ways. I typically use a hybrid of both IO and O now, depending on what I have available. Cow manure, chicken manure, water soluble ferts like Miracle Grow or MG clones, (yes, I love the stuff), watered down human urine (old or new, does not matter), blood meal, bone meal, kelp meal, bat guano, hoof and horn meal (hard to find now), cottonseed meal, SuperPhosphate, rock phosphate, Osmocote, yadda yadda. Pretty much anything except fish meal, which attracts raccoons and flies. Also as stated, organic means different things to different people, and in different contexts and applications. Organic labeling and certification is a joke IMO, as they allow things like Neem/aza, but not avid/abamectin. Abamectin is naturally produced my soil bacteria. Anyway, much hair splitting there. As I understand it, California is looking to certify some sort of organic labeling for weed grown commercially there.
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And Shiva created Cannabis from his own body to purify the Amrita, the elixir of life. |
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#44 |
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Curing is a process of extended drying. Some volatile compounds may cyclize to something similar, but not quite what it was before, slightly altering smell, but not really changing it. It aids in long term storage to ensure against mold.
I don't want pale bud that is burnt from being under or over fertilized and had to go through all these processes just to get somewhere. Fan leaves will/should fade naturally as the plant reaches senescence, but this won't, or shouldn't, affect the buds. During this time other colors may come out either naturally or from stress (like cold). Growers will sometimes/often use varying amounts of stress to induce resin production (well duh tell us something we don't know lol). I don't really know why we cure bud. It is another extended step that to me, is truly unnecessary if other things are done properly. Curing can aid in storage, but if you are drying your bud right, and then put it in a jar with a humidity pack, it stays there and you're done. Perhaps it does help the flavor or smoothness of more harsh pot. I think more often than not it's a stray crappy leaf that is ruining buds (in addition to just the smoke itself being that way it is, coughy), because people just aren't careful or don't care. I know if I'm smoking it, which I am, I leave NO BULLSHIT on my buds. NONE. I prefer a fresh bud once it's dry, and I don't like smoking anything older than 3 months. Bleh yuck! Looks, smells, and tastes stale often times. People always want to make more work for themselves. No amount of drying or not drying or burping jars or doing some voodoo ever changed my bud, it's flavors, or did something so different from the prior harvest that was so noticeable it made me keep doing that every time, and now I tell everyone to that, other than getting your environment correct, using the best light you can, fertilizing properly, and genetics. I think you're doing all these things man, and you already told us all the problems you should work on...
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#45 |
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Also a correction has to be made (or added) to the above statement. According to my notes, plants can take up nitrogen in the form of ammonium, nitrate, and urea directly. Urea is ((NH2)2CO) and is electrically neutral.
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And Shiva created Cannabis from his own body to purify the Amrita, the elixir of life. |
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#46 |
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For the most part, the granular fertilizers often considered "organic" (ie. bone and blood meals, animal shits and other products, composts, ewc), are SLOW RELEASE, vs immediately available liquid fertilizers.
They even state this on all the labels - XYZ percent will be soluble, readily available for your plant to uptake, and the rest is slow release to be broken down over time. They simply assume you should know, oh XYZ % of this is immediately available, so the rest must be acted on over time. It takes some critical thought but most people just lack this. What determines that break down rate? Many factors such as time, the nute source itself, heat, water, microbial activity, etc., etc., Thats it. Its that easy. You're making a tea, you are adding readily available salts and other components in that product that would have otherwise been broken down slowly over time. What you use determine what it does, obviously. Such as EWC tea is adding much more in terms of humates than say a brew of only kelp, though kelp has it's own nutrient stimulating properties, and adds other things to plants..... This is why in real growing, real growers, ie. farmers and the agro industry, use the science of what we know plants want and need as well as bio stimulant products like kelp and composts to aid in nutrient absorption and uptake. But also, different people are using things for different reasons, for example there is a reason why big agro field farmers do certain things, and greenhouse growers do others.
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#47 |
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Old bud can be good if it is cured right. I have been cool curing weed in paper bags for 30 some odd years now. Main reason being that you have to dry the stems completely. Or they will most certainly rot on you in a jar after 6 months. Fast drying rarely removes all the stem moisture.
Other things also happen to weed over time. One big one is that THC degrades into CBN at a rate of about 10% for the first year. CBN is a mellowing cannabinoid and has been show to be as or even more effective than Rx sleeping pills. To each his or her own, but I like old cured weed myself. After about a year or if I have too much weed around, I usually turn a lot of my old weed into hash oil. Mainly for reducing the volume of my stash. I always have more weed growing.
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And Shiva created Cannabis from his own body to purify the Amrita, the elixir of life. |
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#48 | |
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I find the staunch O only position a bit boring. As they are not always as O as they believe. I see bigger differences from media than I do O or IO. The problem with cannabis related feeding and ferts is all the hype. Illicit growers often had zero chemistry or horticultural knowledge beforehand. So they believed what the companies said. "Bud enhancer" etc. And now we have a whole culture of growers who's horticultural knowledge comes from magazine ads. Or Ads that look like an article. Or what it said about the benefits of silicon on the damn label. How much could you learn about human nutrition from looking through the GNC mag? Fuck all. |
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#49 | |
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And Shiva created Cannabis from his own body to purify the Amrita, the elixir of life. |
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#50 | |
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LOL!! My palate is different to yours. I do what pleases mine. |
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