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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    Alright, so I have like 30 clones in RW now. I plan on transplanting them as soon as I figure some things out with a little help from some friends.

    So i am gonna do a sog in peatmoss/perlite in these pots.

    Are the pots too big to go into straight from clones?
    dusto2k3 Reviewed by dusto2k3 on . Transplanting Alright, so I have like 30 clones in RW now. I plan on transplanting them as soon as I figure some things out with a little help from some friends. So i am gonna do a sog in peatmoss/perlite in these pots. Are the pots too big to go into straight from clones? Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    Are those 2 gallon pots? I would think you can depending on how big you let them get in the RW .... but for the most part you can. Transplant when the clones are rootbound.

    But ....peatmoss/perlite? I've never heard of that before .... is that some kind of hydro?

    If you are using soil a good potting soil and perlite would work.
    :abduct:

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    yeah, usually people throw in some vermuculite too, but i cant get that around here.

    Its hydro, like a soilless soil....

    If i used real soil, like FFOF or something, it would be too expensive to change out every harvest. I do like 30 plants, so it would be pricey, this i can get for like 15 bucks for 30 pots and i get great results. I'm still learning, but ima bout to harvest some nice nuggs here in a few days.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    Quote Originally Posted by dusto2k3
    yeah, usually people throw in some vermuculite too, but i cant get that around here.

    Its hydro, like a soilless soil....

    If i used real soil, like FFOF or something, it would be too expensive to change out every harvest. I do like 30 plants, so it would be pricey, this i can get for like 15 bucks for 30 pots and i get great results. I'm still learning, but ima bout to harvest some nice nuggs here in a few days.
    Nice dusto, that soilless mix sounds intersting. You should post a more info about it, peat + perlite would be very cheap. How often do you have to water/feed etc and do you have it actually set up like a hydro system like a drip system or something? I'm interested.

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    Please dont' use peat moss!!!!!
    If you want soilless, go with coco coir.
    Peat moss pH=4.5=your plants DEAD

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    hydroton? $20 for 50L, pH neutral, perfect.
    :rasta: :rasta: :rasta: :rasta: :rasta:

  8.     
    #7
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    I like hydroton for an all-out hydro grow. It's just SO easy to deal with!
    But I still think if I were ever going to go 'soilless soil' it would be a coco/perlite mix.

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    Stinky, alright, i think that that might be some of the issues i had with this grow. Somewhere sometime i had read that the peatmoss was ph neutral (stoned?). I was thinking of using this (coco) per your suggestion. What do you think, like maybe 60/40 coco/perlite. If not, what's a good ratio?

    I also have these cocotek coir bricks available near me....what about these: cocotek.

    Stinky, i see you with all these informative (data/science-backed) posts, I'm curious what are your credentials?

  10.     
    #9
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    And this hydroton, I would just fill the buckets with the pelets? It seems like I would need to add more to stabilize the medium? am i wrong. I've never dealt with hydroton. Can you give me some info to convince me to se if....i promise it wont be hard..

  11.     
    #10
    Senior Member

    Transplanting

    Since I've never used coco before I'm not really qualified to help with the ratio... I use around 40% perlite to lighten up a heavy, sticky, COMPOST media...now, coco; well that's naturally much fluffier to begin with so it stands to reason you could use a lot less perlite.
    I think you might have seen promix being listed as pH neutral... I think they must treat it or something... it's a peat-heavy media.
    If you aren't totally in love with soilless I still suggest using as much composted humus as you can get your paws on because the pH is so stable and the organic acids are great for your plants.
    If you go with coco, or any other soilless, you might try watering with topmax even in veg, or Soil Syrup (very cheap source of humic acids that you would otherwise get from composted leaf clippings etc)
    I've just begun using humates in veg and think they're great.

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