Activity Stream
227,828 MEMBERS
11005 ONLINE
greengrassforums On YouTube Subscribe to our Newsletter greengrassforums On Twitter greengrassforums On Facebook greengrassforums On Google+
banner1

Results 1 to 3 of 3
  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    What should be a maximum ppm?

    Growing in soil, White Rhino, 3weeks into veg, using organic food (Age old grow), what would be a safe maximum post-feeding nute level in ppm (measured at runoff water)? Any help would be appreciated.
    senorx12562 Reviewed by senorx12562 on . What should be a maximum ppm? Growing in soil, White Rhino, 3weeks into veg, using organic food (Age old grow), what would be a safe maximum post-feeding nute level in ppm (measured at runoff water)? Any help would be appreciated. Rating: 5
    An armed society is a polite society.:rambo:

    Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.- Benjamin Franklin, 1759.:wtf:

  2.   Advertisements

  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    What should be a maximum ppm?

    I don't have a clue!

    (For one thing, it will depend on ppm in your water...)

    You could increase the dose very gradually, then back it off when tip burn starts to show.

    a) I would do this on a test plant or 2, not the whole crop

    b) Personally, I prefer a more conservative feeding plan. Less problems with buildup in the soil, better taste, etc.

    I've found that running hot nutes in soil requires a close eye on soil moisture. As the soil dries out, the unused nutes become much more concentrated.

    A safe nute level with moist soil can burn as your soil dries out. Just my experience, YMMV. Hermie :thumbsup:
    Need advice wth plant problems?
    Use this form:
    http://boards.cannabis.com/plant-pro...ing-forms.html

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    What should be a maximum ppm?

    Quote Originally Posted by DreadedHermie
    I don't have a clue!

    (For one thing, it will depend on ppm in your water...)

    You could increase the dose very gradually, then back it off when tip burn starts to show.

    a) I would do this on a test plant or 2, not the whole crop

    b) Personally, I prefer a more conservative feeding plan. Less problems with buildup in the soil, better taste, etc.

    I've found that running hot nutes in soil requires a close eye on soil moisture. As the soil dries out, the unused nutes become much more concentrated.

    A safe nute level with moist soil can burn as your soil dries out. Just my experience, YMMV. Hermie :thumbsup:
    My tap water starts around 200 ppm. If you see my posts re horticultural oil in this forum you'll see why I'm asking. Essentially, I od'd my plants on nitrogen by using a fish oil based product to kill spider mites, not realizing that fish emulsion is used as a fast acting cure for nitro deficiency, and I had just fertilized the day before. Voila, a ppm reading in my runoff of over 2000ppm. I spent 6 hours today flushing all of my plants, and was wondering when to stop. No one responded, so I got most down to below 1000 ppm. I actually flushed them so much I had to add soil to cover up the grodan cubes.
    An armed society is a polite society.:rambo:

    Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.- Benjamin Franklin, 1759.:wtf:

Similar Threads

  1. Maximum Saturation
    By axxxxe in forum GreenGrassForums Lounge
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 04-01-2009, 03:55 AM
  2. Maximum Yields
    By Iscandar in forum Indoor Growing
    Replies: 17
    Last Post: 08-08-2008, 05:48 PM
  3. Maximum amount of trouble?
    By altoids in forum Washington (WA)
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 02-16-2008, 09:24 PM
  4. Maximum watts for a low key operation?
    By AmazingBlazing in forum Indoor Growing
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 04-11-2007, 08:16 PM
  5. is there a maximum yield per m squared
    By abcmofo in forum Basic Growing
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 05-30-2005, 01:45 AM
Amount:

Enter a message for the receiver:
BE SOCIAL
GreenGrassForums On Facebook