Howdy do,
Just gona have to add to this if you don't mind.. if using baking soda to adjust the ph of a nutrient solution, it will accumulate in the soil and continue to increase the soil ph. I ran out of ph up and decided to use baking soda as a substitute. This is what happened to me,whilst using baking soda.
The soil ph crept up to nearly 10 even though my nutrient solution didn't rise above 6.5. I've found using Ph strips is more reliable than using a Ph pen, whilst using deionized water for a slurry test..
There is quite a bit of info online about ph pens not reading correctly with deionized water on its own..
This is what she looked like before, during and after..
I was raising my nutrient solution from 4.5 to 6.3.
When I took a soil sample from the bottom of the pot, I added a little bit vinegar and there was a reaction; It started frothing up, showing there was large amounts of bicarb still in the soil...it doesn't degrade naturally I think