fortphoenix
- Posts
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- Joined
- Aug 22, 2015
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yeah thats what i was thinking but i kinda just feel like hydroton would be a pain to deal with and clean and Id like to make it work with rock wool if possible. i asked some guy with a youtube channel on youtube and he said to cut/prune the roots and put them in the rockwool and it would take about 2 days for them to bounce back from the shockIm no expert but Youv answred your own question my friend.net pots & hydroton.
have a bit more faith in your own logic.im pretty certain putting bare roots into rock wool would be difficult.the best u could do is get the bigger 6" as you suggested and try and get it in to the hole.i doubt it would stand straight though and it would damage your roots.hydroton will serve you better in this instance i think.
Yea what he saidIm no expert but Youv answred your own question my friend.net pots & hydroton.
have a bit more faith in your own logic.im pretty certain putting bare roots into rock wool would be difficult.the best u could do is get the bigger 6" as you suggested and try and get it in to the hole.i doubt it would stand straight though and it would damage your roots.hydroton will serve you better in this instance i think.
You could try and put the roots/stem between 2 rockwool cubes and hold em toghether with a tie.yeah thats what i was thinking but i kinda just feel like hydroton would be a pain to deal with and clean and Id like to make it work with rock wool if possible. i asked some guy with a youtube channel on youtube and he said to cut/prune the roots and put them in the rockwool and it would take about 2 days for them to bounce back from the shock
I agree ken.hydroton is a better medium than rockwool.i really cant stand rockwool.Transplanting from the EZ cloner is easy... Just put the long root tail in a circular pattern in the bottom of the net pot and fill it with hydroton and then put pieces of Rockwool on top... or, just use hydroton only.
Rockwool will stay drenched... Better to use hydroton.
No need to change net pots... The net pot doesn't matter, it's the size of the roots that exit the net pot that matters.
If you do decide to put it in Rockwool, don't be afraid to soak the rockwool in 5.5 pH water, and break it completely apart and then just put it in pieces inside of the net pot.
The best way, is to use a combination of hydrogen and Rockwool... Fill the pot with hydroton to make sure that the hydroton stays above the water line when the table is flooded, and then put rockwool on top of that, which will stay dry.
I flood my tables for a 1/2 hour every 3 1/2 hours... That gives a 4 hour cycle. So that's 3 1/2 hours drain, 1/2 hour flood.
Day or night, doesn't matter.
I agree ken.hydroton is a better medium than rockwool.i really cant stand rockwool.
Im no hydro expert i just know i think hydrotons better than rockwool but its a personal preference.
as to training...it sounds like u already have a plan worked out in your head but youre just a little unsure of yourself.from what youv said so far u seem to have a decent grasp of what your doing.just go for it bud.its the best way to learn.
very true, I'm just concerned with how i am going to pull off cloning/ vegging because with the perpetual style I'm trying to do i need to take clones.... off of 2 week old clones
In ebb and flow, the trays are empty except for the net pots... The net pots are full of hydroton. Some people put rockwool on top, but if you do, make sure it stays dry. You flood the table for a short period of time, then drain it for a longer period of time... You do this constantly.so you keep that cycle 24/7 day and night in flower? and when you put it like that the what the hell is the point of the rockwool? lol I'm also not sure what you mean when you say "Fill the pot with hydroton to make sure that the hydroton stays above the water line when the table is flooded, and then put rockwool on top of that, which will stay dry." are you saying put the netcups in a flood tray with a cover with holes for the net pots so the net pots ar suspended in the air and have the water flood only up to the bottom of the netcups?
In your experience ken which of those methods u mention is more productive?id assume flood and drain(ebb & flow) would be best because its a higher oxygenated environment but im not 100% sure on that.In ebb and flow, the trays are empty except for the net pots... The net pots are full of hydroton. Some people put rockwool on top, but if you do, make sure it stays dry. You flood the table for a short period of time, then drain it for a longer period of time... You do this constantly.
If you're going to hang the net pots and add a lid...and keep the tray full of water with an air bubbler, it now becomes deep water culture, not ebb and flow.
if you keep the table full of water and keep the pump on and circulating, it now becomes a recirculating deep water culture.
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