Quote Originally Posted by WashougalWonder
Well as many of you know I am constantly experimenting. Lately with nutes. I wanted bulkier buds, more resin. Was doing fine with just FF OF, but felt I could get more.

So I started using it. Spendy stuff, but it does not take much. For example I consider 1 ml total in the life of a plant, in a 3 gallon pot, given in two 0.5 ml doses, week 4 and week 5 of flower. No other nutes at same time.

If you give any potassium, after this be cautious or expect a lot of yellowing. I played with following the 4th and 5th weeks by giving 1 ml of Ultra snowstorm every other watering for the last 3 weeks, increasing the amount of water to flushing in the last 2 weeks, essentially just plenty of runoff for those 2 weeks. This does cause quite a bit of yellowing, but the plants really pack on the bulk and trichomes in the last 3 weeks. I would say 25%-40% more bulk depending on species.

Sensi Star just loves that stuff. White widow slows vertical growth, so I assume this also works as a vertical growth inhibitor (VGI), and puts on more bulk than I have ever seen. The more indica-like, the better the results I think.

This stuff is potent, and will burn the holey pooh outta your plants if you OD it or OD on K or P after dosing it. (I actually start overwatering the week after the last dose. I also note that after the first dose the plant craves water.

So not giving a company a pitch, giving a nute a feedback report and you can decide for yourself if it is worth the money.
I have to ask if you were also using the 3 soluble products from FF along with the BB, TB and GB as well as the OF soil before you did this experiment to compare results. I ask because that +50 P load that the cha-ching puts in there every other watering to promote oil production is pretty dang strong. Here now in the 5th week I just started adding molasses to the mix to make a very impressive looking nute soup to give them every 4 days.

You know me. If there is something better out there I want to try it. I just want to make sure we are comparing apples against apples here.

Emmie