In The Lab

I wonder ...

Mine have always started the fade when I drench 'em, same as yours. Some do, some don't, and I've never been able to isolate the difference. Putting some EWC into the soil definitely helps, but that always bothered me because it just treats the symptom. I was thinking about how GE would help, but that would negate the effect of the Cat drench, so ...

Then I had a thought. Do you suppose it's because there isn't enough nutrition locked up in the cations? Maybe the issue is a failure to fully load the cations, meaning we should be looking at how we fed earlier in the veg phase.

:hmmmm:
 
I wonder ...

Mine have always started the fade when I drench 'em, same as yours. Some do, some don't, and I've never been able to isolate the difference. Putting some EWC into the soil definitely helps, but that always bothered me because it just treats the symptom. I was thinking about how GE would help, but that would negate the effect of the Cat drench, so ...

Then I had a thought. Do you suppose it's because there isn't enough nutrition locked up in the cations? Maybe the issue is a failure to fully load the cations, meaning we should be looking at how we fed earlier in the veg phase.

:hmmmm:

I think it's the Cat Drench. As we know, they go crazy after that and I think we just run out of energy.....at the exact wrong time!
 
Doc, would phasing in the CD, dilute, instead of wham!!! work? Going 100 miles an hour and then slamming the gears into
reverse...
instead, slowly add the CD while phasing over from GE to CD..
just a thought..

It's that abrupt change of direction that makes the CD "work!" Without that, you just get normal bud formation and very nice produce! The CD is what takes the resin to another level, etc.

I'm thinking about going less concentrated. But I can't skip it.......And your idea of drawing it out is certainly worthy of a good try, but the lab told me the snapping back and forth is what really drives them....and they appear to be correct.

More than anything else it's the containers...
 
Doc, giving the plant Cat late gives you a fluffier ?and still great bud.. Giving it early, before 3 weeks bloom does?
Will this work.. if you give it a jolt of Cat as soon as bloom starts w flip of light schedule, and alternate between weak Cat and GE/Transplant

That's a possibility!

Early CD leads to smaller, very tight buds.
Proper CD leads to slightly smaller, extremely tight and resinous buds.
late CD seems to create hairier buds....

The trouble could very well be nitrogen fixation. I'm actually toying with the idea of Cat Drench in veg once...in order to establish nitrogen fixation BEFORE bloom.
 
Doc, giving the plant Cat late gives you a fluffier ?and still great bud.. Giving it early, before 3 weeks bloom does?
Will this work.. if you give it a jolt of Cat as soon as bloom starts w flip of light schedule, and alternate between weak Cat and GE/Transplant

What ratio are you suggesting as a "weak" solution?
 
Doc, I'm honored to share this here.


SOIL MIXING:Doc Bud's High Brix Kit

I came home today to find two packages, one containing 15# of worm castings and the other a 60# bale of Promix HP. We live on the third floor, 40 steps up. Thankfully I am a 61 year old woman smart enough to be a practitioner of Callanetics, so my core is strong baby! I rolled that bale up to the third floor, end over end, stuck it onto my mini dolly and rolled it into the living room. Then I dashed across the street to buy a large tote to mix this batch of soil in. I have one large tote, but I'm mixing LOS tomorrow. WooHoo!!! Soil mixing two days in a row!!

Let's get started.

I studied Doc's instructions on his lab thread and did my best to stick to them. Here's the link.

In The Lab

Doc was very patient with my exuberance and answered posted questions quickly. I'd warned him ahead of time and I appreciate the tolerance of my bubbly excitement. :laughtwo::green_heart:

I mixed up half a batch. I'll be starting with one 7 gallon pot, but we all know I'm going to want to expand, and the soil stores well with proper care, so half a batch it is!

Watch how easy this was to do.

I'm going to need a supply of water. It's rained every day this month and the tub I use for collecting water is full, so we'll use that.

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During the winter I thought it had split from the pressures of ice formation, but I was wrong. :blushsmile:

Next I need to measure out half of the amendments. I weighed out the entire bag.

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Then I split that in half. The rest goes into storage for the next batch.

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Now, I only need 1/2 of the bale of Promix. I measured the height, marked it at halfway and set to work dumping it into the tote.

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The rest of the bale will be sealed with tape and stored on the balcony with the other bale of peat moss.

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Dump the amendments into the Promix HP.

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Add the EWC.

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Begin mixing. This is one of my favorite steps. In my opinion, soil mixing is best done by hand.

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All the way up to the elbows.

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You need to get right down to the bottom and dredge it up over and over and over again. This stage is where I make sure everything is broken up and evenly distributed. I keep going until I no longer come up with patches of earth worm castings. Then I continue dredging and tumbling for a while longer, until I'm satisfied that the energy I'm feeling is one of balance. It's a Mother Earth thing I think. :green_heart:

Now that it's all mixed evenly .....

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..... it's time to add some water. According to the directions, for a half batch I would need 1 1/2 - 2 1/2 gallons of water. The Chapin sprayer holds 2. I went with that. I took my time and sprayed it on, letting it soak in.

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I let it sit for as long as it took to load in all of the pictures up to this point. Then I went back and mixed it again.

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I'll let you in on a secret. This is my favorite part. Only the top layer of the mix has any water in it. You have to begin churning this all together to break up the moist level and blend it into the dry areas. See the difference in this picture?

image22945.jpg


You want those dry areas to be nonexistent by the time you're done. I choose these large totes because they're large enough to hold the volume I'm mixing and shallow enough that I can plunge my arms into the soil right up to my elbows. Have I mentioned how much I LOVE mixing soil?

image22944.jpg


My technique is to sit on a stool at one end of the tote, plunge my hands in to either side right down to the bottom outside, then scoop under to the middle and dredge the bottom layer up through the center, gently bouncing as I go. When I was satisfied that end of the tote to the center was mixed completely (no dry peat moss at all) I turned it around to the other end and repeated that process. I was up past my elbows. Almost had to shower when I was done. :laughtwo:

It was a glorious time. Mixing soil is a spiritual experience for me. As I'm mixing the components into a homogenous matrix I'm imbuing it with love and positive energy and thinking of the healthy and vigorous plants that will eventually dazzle us in this new batch of living soil.

After a time it's obvious that it's well mixed and it's time to stop. I usually linger a while longer. My skin likes the feel of healthy dirt.

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The top goes on and the soil cooks for the next month.

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How easy was that? One down, one to go.


Tomorrow night - Living Organic Soil. A different approach to soil building entirely. :laughtwo::green_heart:
 
"Soil mixer upper". I'll take that. I got so revved up I'm still wandering around here celebrating at 2:30 AM. :laughtwo::green_heart:

Glad you enjoyed it.
 
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