• Home
  • Forums
  • Medical Cannabis Cultivation
  • General Indoor Growing
  • Coco Coir
  • Coco, planter size, and watering frequency

Coco, planter size, and watering frequency

  • Thread starter Thread starter cctt
  • Start date Start date Aug 28, 2013
  • Tagged users Tagged users None

Coco, planter size, and watering frequency

cctt Aug 28, 2013 33 Replies 103,150 Views
Page 2 of 2 · Replies 21–34 of 34
Prev
  • 1
  • 2
First Prev 2 of 2

Skoosh

Posts
466
Reactions
959
Joined
Apr 11, 2011
Points
93
Feb 11, 2014
#21
Rice hulls increase aeration, significantly.
 
Quote Reply

shoestring

Posts
302
Reactions
459
Joined
Dec 5, 2013
Points
63
Feb 18, 2014
#22
Rice hulls really does increase aeration properties of.coco coir. As does perlite. Ive done.side.by sides and perlite mixed in really does make.for a slightly better plant than straight coco. Also ive grown 6 foot trees in 2 gallon aurora pots. Had to feed/water em like every fee hours but its how i like to keep me mums. Coco coir forever!!
 
Quote Reply

Hank

Posts
91
Reactions
65
Joined
Nov 6, 2012
Points
18
Mar 11, 2014
#23
cctt I have the same problem. I'm using 23L pots with straight coco and it was taking 7 days until I could water again. Now that my plants are bigger I'm down to about 4 days. My question is would air pots be a solution?
 
Quote Reply

chaosinc

Posts
66
Reactions
27
Joined
Dec 21, 2010
Points
18
Mar 16, 2014
#24
Maybe I'm confused here! I've been running coco for approx 5yrs now and have never fed nearly what you guys are talking about, and my yields are just fine. I vary between 7, and 10 gallon pots, water once every couple days in veg, and once every other day in bloom, am I missing something here?
 
Quote Reply

shoestring

Posts
302
Reactions
459
Joined
Dec 5, 2013
Points
63
Mar 16, 2014
#25
You can treat a plant grown in coco coir medium just like a soil or peat based soilless substrate. By this i mean growing in the same sized pots and frequency of water/ feed times. They will grow just fine. In fact thats how i grow my vigorous mother plants in my veg room to kinda slow em down a bit. Its just that you can also treat coco coir more as a hydroponic medium by using smaller pots (2 gallon pots will grow TREES with no signs of being rootbound) and feeding more frequently but at lower ppms. The plants seem to love this kind of setup. Just make sure if you do it this way that u get lots of runoff wastewater. And ive also found that building a drip manifold and using a resevoir with a pump hooked to a timer gave me much more precise control over when i wanted/needed to feed the ladies. At full rocking bloom most of my varieties are getting 2 to 3 45 second feed times broken up equally over a 12 hour phtoperiod day. Ive grown just about every way out there from dwc, ebb and flo, nft, aeroponic, passive wick. You name it and for me a automated non recovery drip system in coco coir is it hands down. Good luck
 
Last edited: Mar 16, 2014
Reactions: Yycfire, Ganja Mystic, Bcgrowop and 4 others
Quote Reply

Nybadboy

Posts
212
Reactions
125
Joined
Oct 15, 2016
Points
43
Oct 30, 2016
#26
We Solidarity said:
I should definitely rephrase that to say a funky CEC...coir colloids hold cations (especially Ca and K+) very tight and doesn't start exchanging them until they are all filled, or the coco is "charged". In fact, the reason coco has to be washed repeatedly is because of all the bonds to K+ and other cations. Pre-bagged coco is usually chemically treated to allow for maximum cation exchange and then amended with some sort of mineral ore (IE azomite, glacial rock dust, etc) and a calcium source (crab shell, oyster shell, CaCO3, etc) to further stabilize CEC and PH. Without those amendments, the CEC is quite high...but also what's been described to me as "sticky". Not washing or buffering coco right is what will lead to significant problems...if I understand correctly coco is mostly cellulose and is freshly harvested (meaning it hasn't aged for centuries like most high CEC organics), so it is still very fresh and electromagnetically active, which means it's CEC fluctuates with the PH and shouldn't be regarded as "stable" unlike peat, biochar, compost, etc.

But ya...your most common cations in treated coco are gonna be Ca and Mg if you're using coco specific (or anything in a bottle, really) nutes, and they will definitely act as antagonists, especially in low EC or high P/K environments. PH alters the availability of Ca and Mg as cations so if you're Ca deficient lower your PH and if your Mg deficient raise it a little. Well-balanced coco shouldn't need much Ph adjustment as it's cation exchange isn't extremely active. Cations only really start getting released and exchanged when some are made more available or less available due to inconsistencies in PH or feed ratios. Being a fresh and very active medium, coir is still decomposing, which means it will still be exchanging nitrogen and carbon molecules, which can affect N availability for your plant.

I'm just ranting at this point...I don't even remember why I said no CEC, probably because I didn't want to start typing out all this lol
Click to expand...
Sorry to but in guys
I'm running in coco and having all kinds of issues it seems every time I feed and hit with sensi cal (cal mag ) product with higher N in it my plants yellow up and some even looked burned this is drivi g me crazy .
Any suggestions would be great
 
Quote Reply
A

axcxe

Posts
1
Joined
Mar 5, 2016
Points
1
Nov 4, 2016
#27
I'm running in coco and having all kinds of issues it seems every time I feed and hit with sensi cal (cal mag ) product with higher N in it my plants yellow up and some even looked burned this is driving me crazy .
Any suggestions would be great
Click to expand...

Have you checked the EC and PH of your runoff? Sounds like their might be a bunch of salts built up in the medium.
 
Quote Reply

Nybadboy

Posts
212
Reactions
125
Joined
Oct 15, 2016
Points
43
Nov 6, 2016
#28
I was ph at 5.5 and now I bumped it to 6 at most 6.2 and I think things are turning around but I don't want to speak to soon
 
Quote Reply
G

gonnagro

Posts
35
Reactions
30
Joined
Jun 16, 2013
Points
18
Nov 6, 2016
#29
Nybadboy said:
Sorry to but in guys
I'm running in coco and having all kinds of issues it seems every time I feed and hit with sensi cal (cal mag ) product with higher N in it my plants yellow up and some even looked burned this is drivi g me crazy .
Any suggestions would be great
Click to expand...

I think your probably building up nutes in the coco because the plants aren't eating them because of root rot. This is a problem i've never experienced in tupur but have often experienced in pure coco. Once it starts it takes a while to fix and you will never reuse the coco it started in. Not worth the headaches.

Here is the fastest way to test this theory, however it will also destroy the "life" in your coco. Mix up 1 drop of bleach, (yes bleach), for every 1/2 gallon of ph'd water and do a root drench. Wait a couple of days and do another. If you start to see new growth and green returning, you've found the problem. Now you have to figure out what method you'll use to finish the grow.

You can continue to feed the synthetic nutes with a little bleach to make it to the end of flower and at least have a harvest or you can try to rebuild the "life" in the soil with something like Voodoo Juice or Hydroguard or Caps bennies. If its an 8 week plant, most likely you won't have sufficient time to rebuild the the coco so concern yourself more with the next plant and just nurse this one until the end. No matter what prepare for a low yield and sterilize anything you plan to reuse in another grow before planting in it.

I no longer experiment with coco substrates like I used too. I think Tupur is the best priced and most practical, completely reusable, and the most reasonably priced, (I would like to try a coco/growstone grow, but that's kind of an expensive substrate).

Good luck!
 
Quote Reply

Tnelz

Posts
4,053
Reactions
13,904
Joined
Oct 29, 2013
Points
263
Oct 19, 2017
#30
Haven't seen a ton of this thread just the last 2 posts. I see some people are having issues with coco. My 2 cents. Slf100 will stop salts from building up. And it will also help make food more available. Salt build up and nutrient lock out due to salt build up will demolish u. And it can look like a number of things. So when u post a pic and ask what is this u will get 10 answers all of which may be correct but all will lead to a bad end because it's really lock out. In coco I feel it's imperative to feed and feed often to get maximum results. But it is beyond imperative to make sure u don't get salt build up so use slf or sea green or big time enzyme or something like that. I say slf because A it is made to remediate salts so it will 100 percent keep salt levels in chck but it also has certain bacteria that make calcium more available and cal is imperative in coco. If ur having all types of issues in coco and u just can't figure them out I would almost guarantee is some sort of lock out caused by excess salt. So use a product that assures that won't happen. Respect.
 
Reactions: Rag and martin1992
Quote Reply

Tnelz

Posts
4,053
Reactions
13,904
Joined
Oct 29, 2013
Points
263
Oct 19, 2017
#31
martin1992 said:
Just just purchased cana cannazym will this help salt build up I want to water every 2 days
Click to expand...
It will. If u haven't been having problems it will ensure u don't.
 
Reactions: martin1992
Quote Reply

Tnelz

Posts
4,053
Reactions
13,904
Joined
Oct 29, 2013
Points
263
Oct 20, 2017
#32
martin1992 said:
I did at start can I mix it in with my feed a+b and boost I add tiny bit of calmag I into feed just make sure but will cannazym will help salt build up ?
Click to expand...
Yes it will.
 
Reactions: martin1992
Quote Reply

Tnelz

Posts
4,053
Reactions
13,904
Joined
Oct 29, 2013
Points
263
Oct 20, 2017
#33
martin1992 said:
Great so when I mix cannazym into feed it will help salt build up I can get away with watering 2 days instead of everyday still look healthy atm im learning in progress
Click to expand...
U def don't have to water every day in veg. Or bloom for that matter. However I always did in bloom. But in veg u can go 2 3 days and be fine assuming ur plant isn't telling u otherwise.
 
Reactions: martin1992
Quote Reply
D

Donzilla

Posts
1
Joined
Jan 19, 2018
Points
1
Jan 19, 2018
#34
How many crops are advisable before completely replacing the coco for new coco
 
Quote Reply
Page 2 of 2 · Replies 21–34 of 34
Prev
  • 1
  • 2
First Prev 2 of 2

Thread info

Replies 33
Views 103,150
Started Aug 28, 2013
Latest post Jan 19, 2018
Starter cctt
Forum Coco Coir

Latest posts

  • Cpurola's Outdoor grow in Southeast Michigan 2026
    • Latest: Like2Grow
    • A moment ago
    General Outdoor Growing
  • Grayoldnprouds chant of the ever circling Skeletal Family.
    • Latest: grayoldnproud
    • 23 minutes ago
    Grow Diaries
  • Y
    GRATITUDE
    • Latest: yifeigong
    • 44 minutes ago
    Introduce Yourself
  • Lemon Cherry Gelato from ILGM seed.
    • Latest: Smokey0418
    • Today at 6:58 AM
    Grow Diaries
  • Eternal Sun 2026 outdoor garden grow
    • Latest: cpurola
    • Today at 6:52 AM
    General Outdoor Growing
  • Home
  • Forums
  • Medical Cannabis Cultivation
  • General Indoor Growing
  • Coco Coir
  • Coco, planter size, and watering frequency
  • Contact us
  • Terms and rules
  • Privacy policy
  • Help
  • Home
Community platform by XenForo® © 2010-2026 XenForo Ltd.
Menu
Log in

Sign up

  • Home
  • News
  • Classifieds
  • Forums
    • What's new Featured content New posts New Articles New articles New products Latest activity
  • Social
  • Strains
  • Live
  • Learn
  • Brands
X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?

X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?