salmonslammer
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Just want to chime in on this one > The japanese hops variety is the easiest too graft too in my experience ;}
^^^^Thats the same research article I got my info from.
Hmmm not as similar as we had hoped.
I must have missed/misread something.
What kind of numbers are you runnin for P in your garden? I haven't gone over 50 in over a year.
high P is unecessary IMVHO and experience.
Shit, I pump it in there like it's goin' out of style bro. It's probably overkill but I like my current reg. If it ain't broke...;)
You should try less sometime. But yeah if it aint broke dont fix it...
OR you could be like jiro the sushi expert and be a perpetual state of trying to improve your creations.
:)
You should try less sometime. But yeah if it aint broke dont fix it...
OR you could be like jiro the sushi expert and be a perpetual state of trying to improve your creations.
:)
The Japanese would take cannabis cultivation to the next level lol
Yeah I saw your post right after I posted. I called this hops grower this morning to try and pick his brain a bit.. I think they have the day off though as I am still waiting on a call back.
The problem I have is trying to compare cannabis with things like tomatoes. Tomato is a fruit. Cannabis is flower production. I feel like there should not be a comparison made at all. Strawberries, tomatoes, wheat, melons... they all have different optimum nutrient profiles.
Unfortunately, the studies for cannabis profiles are not as vast, and hard to come by legitimate research, not to mention so many other variables with regard to strains.
Thats a good read, I agree with you about the tomatoes, some ratios are similar, but I think hops are more accurate. Only if they had research on hops grown with hydroponics, that would be interesting to see how it would compare to cannabis in a drip system with perlite or rockwool.
right. I searched high and low and the only people I could find in to hydro hops were novice growers.
right. I searched high and low and the only people I could find in to hydro hops were novice growers.
Hops, like grapes, (and cannabis in my opinion) are known to take on notes of the soil they were grown in.
While the same effect might be achievable in a hydro setting--the market at large (beer brewers) cares about where and in what dirt your hops were grown, exactly like grapes grown in--for instance--the champagne region or napa valley.
LOL please send me a linkdid you ever see the Japanese guy that grew a huge ass tomato underground with a shitload of fiber optic lighting?