Outdoor Nutrient Feeding Fox Farms

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tommyarmour

tommyarmour

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I'm having a hard time finding an answer. I have two outdoor plants in 45 gallon smart pots. I have been feeding them the Fox farms trio. How many premixed gallons should I feed each plant? So far I mix 1 gallon per plant. 6 tsp of big bloom, 2 tsp of grow big in a gallon jug. Shake it up and pour the gallon on the soil. I assume I'm supposed to be feeding them much more like three to five gallons per plant. I'm using Happy frog potting soil as well. When I water I add 20 gallons of water.

The next feeding I plan on using 2 gallons per plant of premixed nutrient solution. How far do I take this. 5 gallons of nutrient solution per plant?

Any help would be awesome.

Thanks,

Tommy
 
Outdoor nutrient feeding fox farms
souf69

souf69

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I'm having a hard time finding an answer. I have two outdoor plants in 45 gallon smart pots. I have been feeding them the Fox farms trio. How many premixed gallons should I feed each plant? So far I mix 1 gallon per plant. 6 tsp of big bloom, 2 tsp of grow big in a gallon jug. Shake it up and pour the gallon on the soil. I assume I'm supposed to be feeding them much more like three to five gallons per plant. I'm using Happy frog potting soil as well. When I water I add 20 gallons of water.

The next feeding I plan on using 2 gallons per plant of premixed nutrient solution. How far do I take this. 5 gallons of nutrient solution per plant?

Any help would be awesome.

Thanks,

Tommy
Back up on the ferts for a few weeks, to avoid buildup. If you can get a bag of worm castings, apply around the stalk but not on it. Two or three cups will do.
 
tommyarmour

tommyarmour

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Back up on the ferts for a few weeks, to avoid buildup. If you can get a bag of worm castings, apply around the stalk but not on it. Two or three cups will do.
Thanks for the reply.... I have only fed the plants once, and only 1 gallon per plant. Its been really dry in my area. So the soil dry's up in 1-2 days at most. I plan on feeding once per week. Instead of every other watering. So there is zero buildup at this point. No reason to flush. I ordered a ph meter to keep the ph correct. Ive used plenty of worm castings about the best thing out there. I understand how to flush and keep ph on point. Right now my plants if anything are starving for some nutrition and of course I will put some castings on there. Back to my original question. I noticed indoor growers are using a entire gallon of nutrients for 5 gallon smart pots. Does that mean I should use 5-10 gallons to feed my outdoor plants? I also understand every strain in different as well. And keeping an eye on ph, ppm, etc with be paramount.
 
souf69

souf69

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Thanks for the reply.... I have only fed the plants once, and only 1 gallon per plant. Its been really dry in my area. So the soil dry's up in 1-2 days at most. I plan on feeding once per week. Instead of every other watering. So there is zero buildup at this point. No reason to flush. I ordered a ph meter to keep the ph correct. Ive used plenty of worm castings about the best thing out there. I understand how to flush and keep ph on point. Right now my plants if anything are starving for some nutrition and of course I will put some castings on there. Back to my original question. I noticed indoor growers are using a entire gallon of nutrients for 5 gallon smart pots. Does that mean I should use 5-10 gallons to feed my outdoor plants? I also understand every strain in different as well. And keeping an eye on ph, ppm, etc with be paramount.
Less is more is the answer here.
Less nutrients more water if you dry out quickly. With my outdoor I feel biology is more important than chemistry.
 
tommyarmour

tommyarmour

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Less is more is the answer here.
Less nutrients more water if you dry out quickly. With my outdoor I feel biology is more important than chemistry.
I've always followed that less is more advice. It just makes me wonder how the indoor guys can get away with feeding so heavy. I mean one gallon of nutrients to 5 gallons of soil is 20%. I can't imagine using 20% in a 45 gallon plus soil base. That is why I'm searching for the answer. I understand most outdoor guys in 200 gallon smart pots can't really do this type of nutrient feeding. But only growing 2 plants for a total of 90 gallons of soil. Seems to be doable. Biology is the obvious choice. I used to just make super soil on my indoor grows in the past. I could get start to finish with a great super soil. Outdoor plants not so much, they need extra due to size. So you can't necessarily give me a answer to my question? I know there are too many scenarios to take into consideration. I guess I was just looking for. Approx feeding per gallon to 45 gallons of soil. Doing several internet searches just gives a lot of what to use and not how much to use. I guess I'll keep looking. Thanks man appreciate you advice and time to answer my questions.
 
souf69

souf69

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I've always followed that less is more advice. It just makes me wonder how the indoor guys can get away with feeding so heavy. I mean one gallon of nutrients to 5 gallons of soil is 20%. I can't imagine using 20% in a 45 gallon plus soil base. That is why I'm searching for the answer. I understand most outdoor guys in 200 gallon smart pots can't really do this type of nutrient feeding. But only growing 2 plants for a total of 90 gallons of soil. Seems to be doable. Biology is the obvious choice. I used to just make super soil on my indoor grows in the past. I could get start to finish with a great super soil. Outdoor plants not so much, they need extra due to size. So you can't necessarily give me a answer to my question? I know there are too many scenarios to take into consideration. I guess I was just looking for. Approx feeding per gallon to 45 gallons of soil. Doing several internet searches just gives a lot of what to use and not how much to use. I guess I'll keep looking. Thanks man appreciate you advice and time to answer my questions.
No worries, just use what the bottles say to use. If your pots are fifty gals then mix up ten gallons per plant with nutes and saturate the whole pot.
Maybe nute every other watering.
 
ComfortablyNumb

ComfortablyNumb

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Worms. Soil is not static. It moves. Things change in the root zone. Water moves a lot of things around.
Put some red wigglers in there and they will begin balancing the environment for you.
They will also make the soil more porus for water.
Get some old, heavy cloth and make covers for the soil around the plants to the pot edge. water thru the cloth. It will keep the sun from sucking them dry.

This should solve uptake issues, and you can keep feeding at the lower levels.

Your plants will thank you.
 
tommyarmour

tommyarmour

11
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Worms. Soil is not static. It moves. Things change in the root zone. Water moves a lot of things around.
Put some red wigglers in there and they will begin balancing the environment for you.
They will also make the soil more porus for water.
Get some old, heavy cloth and make covers for the soil around the plants to the pot edge. water thru the cloth. It will keep the sun from sucking them dry.

This should solve uptake issues, and you can keep feeding at the lower levels.

Your plants will thank you.
I always wondering if puttings some red wigglers into a smart pot would work out. Eventually the roots with be bound. My pots are above ground, after time the root base will sneak through the bottom a little. But can the wigglers survive in a 50 gallon smart pot with no escape and additives along the way.
 
souf69

souf69

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I always wondering if puttings some red wigglers into a smart pot would work out. Eventually the roots with be bound. My pots are above ground, after time the root base will sneak through the bottom a little. But can the wigglers survive in a 50 gallon smart pot with no escape and additives along the way.
Great question, I personally don't think the pots are big enough, but I'm not positive. This is why I use big pots. Believe it or not their are plenty of nutrients in your soil alone for your plants. Its the biology you add to your soil that brings the advantages out.
In that biology are the things you need that pull the good things out, eliminating the need for ph adjustments, nutes, etc.
 
Frankster

Frankster

Never trust a doctor who's plants have died.
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Are you using the liquid trio? or the solid trio?
 
ComfortablyNumb

ComfortablyNumb

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Since you are feeding liquid, you need the worms to keep the root zone from clogging up and shutting down your plants.
Worms are bred in a bathtub. They should be able to handle a fabric pot.
 
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tommyarmour

tommyarmour

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Next years grow:

1. Blood Meal 12-0-0
2 Fish Fertilizer 5-1-1
3. Bone Meal
4. Dr. Earth Bud and Bloom
5. Jamaican Bat Guano (HIgh Phosphorus)

Internet search.....

But for now using up the liquid nutes are a must....... Not cheap.... lol
 
tommyarmour

tommyarmour

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3
Since you are feeding liquid, you need the worms to keep the root zone from clogging up and shutting down your plants.
Worms are bred in a bathtub. They should be able to handle a fabric pot.
What about a layer of castings on top? vs putting some wigglers in there? will the wigglers just bury themselves with wet soil overnight? I could go that route too. Just curious as to the procedure I guess
 
ComfortablyNumb

ComfortablyNumb

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Next years grow:

1. Blood Meal 12-0-0
2 Fish Fertilizer 5-1-1
3. Bone Meal
4. Dr. Earth Bud and Bloom
5. Jamaican Bat Guano (HIgh Phosphorus)

Internet search.....

But for now using up the liquid nutes are a must....... Not cheap.... lol
Yeah, I would use them up too. Stuff costs money. Got a grower friend local that might want them? 25% off sale! LOL
 
ComfortablyNumb

ComfortablyNumb

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The worms are what open the soil. The castings are the worm poop. (Did you know that? Not everyone does.)
They will add all the castings you need, and down where they are needed instead of sitting on top.
 
tommyarmour

tommyarmour

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The worms are what open the soil. The castings are the worm poop. (Did you know that? Not everyone does.)
They will add all the castings you need, and down where they are needed instead of sitting on top.
Yes I knew that, but wont the worms take awhile to do the work required to create the castings? :)
 
ComfortablyNumb

ComfortablyNumb

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Yes I knew that, but wont the worms take awhile to do the work required to create the castings? :)
In the first day a worm leaves about half it's body weight in castings everywhere it travels. They don't wait to excrete, they do it on the fly, so it's a constant process their entire life. Dogs, cats, they are like people and wait to eliminate. Worms are always leaking.
 
tommyarmour

tommyarmour

11
3
In the first day a worm leaves about half it's body weight in castings everywhere it travels. They don't wait to excrete, they do it on the fly, so it's a constant process their entire life. Dogs, cats, they are like people and wait to eliminate. Worms are always leaking.
That's good to know, thanks for the explanation. Always learning something...... .I'm not exactly a newb I have some great journals from years ago. If your interested check out some of my grasscity journals....https://forum.grasscity.com/threads/summer-2011-outdoor-crop-oregon.852940/. I'm in the process of trying to recover my account. I have indoor hydroponics grows. Several large outdoor grows. Just winging it back then .. It's like starting over in a smaller size due to yard restrictions. Asking questions with a clean slate I guess.
 
Frankster

Frankster

Never trust a doctor who's plants have died.
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Yea, if worms have food, they'll explode in growth, no doubts about that one. They really prefer some foods over others.
 
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