radagast
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how can you tellI looked up that soil brand you have in the background. It contains trace NPK fertilizers. I'm assuming it is something like miracle gro soil. Your plant shows signs of excess nitrogen which is what miracle gro soils usually contain in undesirable amounts.
the soil in question at 0.7ec would be fine for seedling thoughI see so much fertilizer/feeding products going on in here, and so early on, even in seedling stages.
I'm going to use as much organic fertilizer as possible. I'll have to see how things go with 7 gallon pots of good, rich soil, but I plan on leaving some room to add good organic stuff on top 4, 6 weeks in.....the soil in question at 0.7ec would be fine for seedling though
THat's a plan for future plants, considering the lack of available space. Right now the small plants keep things simple while i learn on how to take care of it.think about transplanting soon
I looked up that soil brand you have in the background. It contains trace NPK fertilizers. I'm assuming it is something like miracle gro soil. Your plant shows signs of excess nitrogen which is what miracle gro soils usually contain in undesirable amounts.
Thanks, everyone, for the responses. Sorry for the lack of information i provided, here's what my medium is:I see so much fertilizer/feeding products going on in here, and so early on, even in seedling stages. I mean with soil, of course with hydroponics or other soilless mediums feeding is needed.......but if you have good, rich soil, I never found a need to feed for at least the first month of growth, with big enough pots of course. Even after the first month I would just add a little bit of Miracle-Gro or similar feeding formula stuff, and not even with every watering.
Indeed, it's an out-of-use outlet that I'm planning on fixing for the past decade or so. If i'm being honest, it's been so long that i can almost ignore it.That hole in the wall too, in your picture......an outlet not in use? But depending on where it leads to, bugs can get in through there too, or through cracks in windows, doors.....if bugs want in, they will often find their way in.
If it's not connected to anything and you have no intention of using it (maybe it can be reserved for a small fan, more circulation is almost always good, or a UVB light....maybe). If not, plug it/seal it? Until I learned more about these nasty, swarming little fake ladybug bastards I wouldn't turn around and wonder where the heck did this one come from?? Then I watched and saw one crawl right out of a crack in an outlet.....or a tiny slit in the floor/corner, baseboard heater......the point being that bugs have 24/7 to worm their way into your home. You don't have 24/7 to catch them.THat's a plan for future plants, considering the lack of available space. Right now the small plants keep things simple while i learn on how to take care of it.
Thanks, everyone, for the responses. Sorry for the lack of information i provided, here's what my medium is:
Carolina Soil Composition: Sphagnum peat, expanded vermiculite, dolomitic limestone, agricultural gypsum and NPK fertilizer (trace). EC 0,7 pH 5.5 +/- 0.5.
I also added around 20% of vermicast or worm humus.
Indeed, it's an out-of-use outlet that I'm planning on fixing for the past decade or so. If i'm being honest, it's been so long that i can almost ignore it.
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