jackspratt61
Active member
the way i look at humidity is a shield. it allows you to run the temp you want high enough so that transpiration is peak and stomata is open to ideal amount. lowering that shield increases transpiration at first but once it crosses over to the dark side the stomatas close as an emergency intervention to slow water escaping.in turn stops calcium from being mobile but also can lockout other nutrients due to cascade effect on taking up too much too fast. thats where leaf surface temp really comes into play. similar to chuggin a milkshake leads to stomac ache.
its hedgin your bets compared to how often your able to refresh roots with feed. so there are inhibitive dangerous zones at too dry or too moist and then a sweet spot zone which you can choose either aggressive(less) or safe(high) rh levels. it is also strain dependent to a point. lowland plants seem to like media constantly moist but not soaked or dry and a higher comparative humidity. highland plants seem to want the rootzone moisture to swing between extremes. they also like a lower humidity overall. while further dryouts will increase resin content, but that is counterproductive if the dryness is detrimental to primary growth. secondary metabolites eventually run counter to plant health since they are designed to combat biotic dangers.
ive never used hempy but runoff readings for ec and ph are great ways to determine where a problem starts when compared to reservoir levels
I'm currently in earthboxes and check the ec/ph regularly. The plants once rooted in can drastically change the reservoir ec/ph overnight. They will show what they want. Very valuable measurement.