CovertCrops
Member
Hello curious cultivators, welcome to my sea solids trial. After reading Sea energy Agriculture by Dr. Murray my curiosity got the better of me and I decided I wanted to see what this sea solids business was all about. Growing crops with sea water is a fascinating concept.
Edit: I run perpetual tables so new experiments will start before the older ones finish.
2nd trial Natures Nectar + Sea 90 starts on page 6
The instructions call for 1 teaspoon (5ml) per gallon of solution and they advise adding fish emulsion and/or humate, plus wetting agent. The other option I could use is 1 tablespoon per 3 gallons of coco. I'm not sure at this point if I will mix it into the coco for this trial. I have 7 Strawberry cough , 6 Ecsd, and 2 Strawberry diesel clones heading into flower this weekend. These plants have not received sea water yet, will start applying in flower.
Half of the plants will be the control group (Canna coco nutes) and the other half will be fed a seawater diet. All plants will flower in 6L pots of straight Canna coco.
I think I covered all the bases for now but feel free to ask questions. I may not be able to answer them but ask anyways.
more info about sea solids
http://seaagri.com
Edit: I run perpetual tables so new experiments will start before the older ones finish.
2nd trial Natures Nectar + Sea 90 starts on page 6
The instructions call for 1 teaspoon (5ml) per gallon of solution and they advise adding fish emulsion and/or humate, plus wetting agent. The other option I could use is 1 tablespoon per 3 gallons of coco. I'm not sure at this point if I will mix it into the coco for this trial. I have 7 Strawberry cough , 6 Ecsd, and 2 Strawberry diesel clones heading into flower this weekend. These plants have not received sea water yet, will start applying in flower.
Half of the plants will be the control group (Canna coco nutes) and the other half will be fed a seawater diet. All plants will flower in 6L pots of straight Canna coco.
I think I covered all the bases for now but feel free to ask questions. I may not be able to answer them but ask anyways.
more info about sea solids
http://seaagri.com
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