WalterWhiteFire
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No disrespect to homebrew( I know you know your shit!! ), but it's forsure not thrips.
You can use Baking soda to raise the PH. Never buy PH up/down.
dude, those are both chemicals! o_O and relatively useless ones at that. Sulfuric and KSil are both just as 'natural'. Gonna take a lot of lemon juice to move the ph very far..Cool. Lemon down, baking soda up. No chemicals. You all are the best!
Be careful on your foliar spray. I think its just that
Check out this spray...OpticFoliar...Shit rocks plus you can spray when the lights are on. Gotta love that :)
dude, those are both chemicals! o_O and relatively useless ones at that. Sulfuric and KSil are both just as 'natural'. Gonna take a lot of lemon juice to move the ph very far..
I'll try lemon juice out tomorrow and let you all know how much it takes to get the PH down. Anyway, this thread at ICMag is saying if the soil is right, then you don't have to worry about PH: .
Lemon juice works really well Depending on the ppms of the solution you are trying to ph. I mix up 30 gal at a time. I bought a liter for around 3 bucks, that was 2 months ago! Definitely not for the hydro Rez tho!dude, those are both chemicals! o_O and relatively useless ones at that. Sulfuric and KSil are both just as 'natural'. Gonna take a lot of lemon juice to move the ph very far..
You definitely know waaaay more about it than I do! Where do you get sulfuric acid? Does it affect the micro life?By useless i mean they contribute nothing of significance/value to the nutritional profile, where the two i mentioned do (and are fairly essential if you want top-quality meds, regardless where you get specific elements). Adding more salts like sodium bicarbonate raises your ppms with no other benefit I'm aware of besides ph adj (also potentiallty throwing off balance of other elements like K, CA, and ZN).
I have used lemonjuice, it is ~5% citric. I bet actual organic lj costs more than $3/l? Wonder what kind of pesticide residuals are in the non-org kind? Conventional citrus growers are some of the most prolific nasty-chem sprayers, you can easily taste it in their non-org produce. Citric is useful during endflush as an additional chelator, but i don't use it before that.
not enough unfortunately :eek: the microbe thing keeps coming up in a few threads lately, here's one: https://www.thcfarmer.com/community...tips-with-canna-coco.48642/page-7#post-888978You definitely know waaaay more about it than I do! Where do you get sulfuric acid? Does it affect the micro life?
I'll try lemon juice out tomorrow and let you all know how much it takes to get the PH down. Anyway, this thread at ICMag is saying if the soil is right, then you don't have to worry about PH: .
Thats crazy never seen spider mite damage like this. Are they russet mites? If spider mite damage was this severe you would see them and their webs everywhere.So anyway, here's my final report on these spots. Those spots were spider mites. The flowering plants on which they first appeared were healthy enough to ward them off. But all my clones got them. Spots, then necrotic patches, then a rusted look. So I'm definitely keeping on top of them from now on. Weekly neem oil. Pepper spray and Azamax if I ever see anything like that on a vegging plant. After two weeks, my clones have had 2 doses of Azamax, and 2 doses of pepper spray. From now on I'll neem them in veg weekly. I'm not sure if at the end of the pepper spray/Azamax regimen whether or not to dose them with Forbid. Maybe that's overkill. Maybe in the future I will try just pepper spray and see how that works. This time I'm not screwing around with them though.
2nd that, gotta be a spidermites-and situation (unless it's russets, i'm ignorant there)Thats crazy never seen spider mite damage like this. Are they russet mites? If spider mite damage was this severe you would see them and their webs everywhere.
Thats crazy never seen spider mite damage like this. Are they russet mites? If spider mite damage was this severe you would see them and their webs everywhere.