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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    CALCIUM

    Calcium is used extensively in the plant as a component of mature cell walls. As long as the plant is growing, it needs a steady supply of calcium for proper growth and development.

    The only soluble calcium compounds are lime and calcium chloride. The amount of lime that can be used as a fertilizer is limited because it drives the pH up and interferes with the operation of the microbial population in the media. Calcium chloride almost must be used in small quantities, since the accumulation of the chloride ion interferes with the uptake of other negatively charged fertilizer ions and is toxic to the microbial population.
    Calcium sulfate is used in organic plant production systems as a calcium source. Calcium sulfate is essentially insoluble in water and is not available to the plants in its basic form. It can be finely ground and suspended in water for distribution within the production system, where it is processed by the microbial population in the media before the calcium is released into the media in a plant-available form. The processing takes time and the microbial system must remain in balance with its other needs for a maximum amount of calcium to be made available to the plants.

    Calcium sulfate also provide sulfur to the plants, which need some sulfur for adequate growth. Far more sulfate will be provided to the organic plant production system than will be needed by the plants. The plants and the microbial system in an organic production system are fairly tolerant to the presence of high levels of sulfate. There is a limit, however, on how much sulfate the system can tolerate before it starts interfering with the operation of the system. In the field and in growing systems where soil is used, the per-plant ratio of media to plant is much higher than it is in the greenhouse and in containerized organic production systems. Increasing the volume of media in the system increases the systemâ??s holding capacity for cumulative substances like sulfate.

    James Brown

    Calcium should be maintained in a 1.5 : 1 ratio with phosphorous.
    Calcium should be maintained at 3:1 levels to magnesium.
    karmaxul Reviewed by karmaxul on . CALCIUM CALCIUM Calcium is used extensively in the plant as a component of mature cell walls. As long as the plant is growing, it needs a steady supply of calcium for proper growth and development. The only soluble calcium compounds are lime and calcium chloride. The amount of lime that can be used as a fertilizer is limited because it drives the pH up and interferes with the operation of the microbial population in the media. Calcium chloride almost must be used in small quantities, since the Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    From my site....

    Calcium

    Calcium is a fundamental building block in cell formation and particularly in cell physiology. It is the fifth most abundant element in the Earth's crust. Vitamin D in need for absorbtion.

    Lime: Calcium oxide is a white crystalline solid with a melting point of 2572°C. It is manufactured by heating limestone, coral, sea shells, or chalk, which are mainly CaCO3, to drive off carbon dioxide. Lime raises pH and limits the microbial populations within a medium.

    Calcium chloride: is a chemical compound of calcium and chlorine. It is highly soluble in water and it is deliquescent. It is a salt that is solid at room temperature, and it behaves as a typical ionic halide. It can be produced directly from limestone, but large amounts are also produced as a by-product of the Solvay process. Because of its hygroscopic nature, it must be kept in tightly-sealed containers. Chloride ions interfere with uptake of other negatively charged fertilizer ions and also limits the microbial population within a medium..

    Calcium sulfate: is used in Gorilla Grow Complete as calcium source and for sulfur nutrition. Sulfate is the form that most microorganisms and plants use as source of sulfur for nutrition. Sulfate and sulfite is present in only a few unusual constituents of cells. Microbes and plants obtain their sulfur by reducing sulfate to sulfide which is used to synthesize almost all their sulfur containing components. Calcium sulfate is finely ground and suspended in water for distribution within the production system, where it is processed by the microbial population in the media before the calcium is released into the media in a plant-available form.

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    For christ sake... Plant cell walls are made up of the insoluble sugar CELLULOSE - FACT.

    Cellulose does NOT CONTAIN CALCIUM. This is basic school biochemistry.

    You said only forms of soluble forms of calcium are CaCl2 and Ca2Co3.. (which is wrong eg CaI2? Calcium iodide is soluble in water, i could mention many more) why does your fertilise have calcium sulphate in - contradiction.

    STOP TRYING TO EXPLAIN THINGS YOU DONT UNDERSTAND!

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    Sorry master Bluefunk, I beg your graces pardon.

    Please your highness your humble servent only meant to say that calcium is a fundamental building block in cell formation and particularly in cell physiology and do not think I mentioned in my post that it makes up cell walls.

    Read this while I sacrifice a goat in your name........

    Calcium Iodine may be light, air or moisture sensitive. Keep dry. Incompatible with strong acids, strong oxidizing agents.
    MSDS http://www.physchem.ox.ac.uk/MSDS/CA...um_iodide.html

    Their is also calcium citrate, calcium hydroxide, calcium phosphates, calcium nitrate, calcium fluoride and suck a dick calcium but like calcium iodine they are no good for use with fertilizers

    We were not all born geniuses as you so I hope a god such as yourself can show patients with the subhuman species of the earth such as myself.

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    O shit meant to say that with this name.

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    my friend taught me that you grind up the shell of the eggs and spread it in the soil for calcium.

  8.     
    #7
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    Ya it is good for the plants as is the sulfer biproducts gotton from them. I heard that same thing a few years ago.

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    Quote Originally Posted by Chris Seekins
    Ya it is good for the plants as is the sulfer biproducts gotton from them. I heard that same thing a few years ago.
    Really?

    Hey ASSHOLE!

    We're waiting for you over here:
    http://boards.cannabis.com/showthrea...=57311&page=16

    You're hours away from getting your accounts, and your IPs banned...

  10.     
    #9
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    Dont mind Turtle, he was drinking heavily when he wrote that. (Impotentcy problem, shhhh)

  11.     
    #10
    Senior Member

    CALCIUM

    Karmaxul, rather than throwing sarcasm at me, why don't you admit what you say is wrong? I'm gonna carry on correcting you on everything you say which I can disprove as long as you are on this board.

    So.. stop spreading WRONG INFORMATION or fuck off.

    So Karmaxul, you never answer me. How is calcium in plant cell walls?

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