The soil is geared towards fruit which probably means it may be a bit short on Nitrogen but I would let it do its thing. If you add nutrients on top of nutrients you run the risk of locking out things. Best to add anything slowly. You will probably need some gypsum for calcium. You could use a carbonate but that may bring your pH up.
Is your tap city water or well?
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The soil is geared towards fruit which probably means it may be a bit short on Nitrogen but I would let it do its thing. If you add nutrients on top of nutrients you run the risk of locking out things. Best to add anything slowly. You will probably need some gypsum for calcium. You could use a carbonate but that may bring your pH up.
Is your tap city water or well?
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city.....I'm not planning on adding anything until the problem has really started to show its face. So far, transplanting from 1 gal to 3 gal to 5 gal has kept a fresh supply of the soil to them thus far. But, I have LST'd the hell out of them, so they are short bushes right now. Starting yesterday, all LST and topping will stop (except for a round of clones before flipping) for the next 21-28 days. I am not planning of transplanting again. At some point I know they gonna get hungry and I wanna be prepared so I have everything at the ready. I've never used this soil, so I figured it is better to ask than not ask.
At first I was confused on your "newt" pics, but I reread my post and I assume my spell check diid not like neut (it is trying to correct it now)
All in all, this soil is AMAZING!!!! Seems to be worry free as long as you keep transplanting.