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Same here. I just use a 1000 ppm solution to calibrate that came with the pen
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hey good to see you , that was luck , ive just put my new journal up , remember the pigeon mineral soils and the hi cal grit , well its cooked and ive 5 thc bombs ready to live there this week end
THC Bombs Auto X 5 - All In A Super Duper Nutty Soil
you being a bird man might have a interest lol
If its 6.5 then they are not hungry... Your pH will be low if they are hungry. When cannabis gets hungry and its not uptaking nutes it will produce acidic particles(or something that makes soil acidic?) to break down the soil more so it can draw up more nutrients there for your soil ph will drop dramatically. If your pH is stable and you are getting what you put in then your feeding is either stable or to much. This is what I got out the research i have done and saw on roots and the way cannabis grows.
For example on my first soil grow I didnt want to feed my plants to much and burn them so two weeks in flower my pH dropped from 6.5 down to like 5.6. I stopped feeding completly and flushed and flushed my plants trying to get the pH up but in turn I was starving them and the soil kept dropping pH. Finally i figured it out and fed with 1600ppm feeding and BAM they took off and pH neutrilized and stable around 6.5 again. 1600 ppm was a huge jump from Hydro for me because i NEVER went over 1000 ppm in hydro. Soil is a little different hehe.
After about 4 weeks into flowering I usually notice a little yellowing in my plants as MOST flowering nutes have very little N for the flowering phase. I usually mix up my own schedule and can play with it and give my plants what I think they want. So once I see them yellowing from flowering I always give them a nice N dosage of about 650ppm on my water day and then a little less ppm on feed day. This brings the color back and keeps them happy. I do this sometimes 3 times during a 8 week flower. Hope this helps!