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it's insane. Two or so weeks ago we were getting 23c nights and last night got to 6c. Mate out past Nanango hit negatives the other day. Woke up to a thick layer of frost.Yes sure did April and may on record lowest temps![]()
it's insane. Two or so weeks ago we were getting 23c nights and last night got to 6c. Mate out past Nanango hit negatives the other day. Woke up to a thick layer of frost.Yes sure did April and may on record lowest temps![]()
Yes sure did April and may on record lowest temps![]()
I have been very interested in this shit (quite literally black soldier fly shit lol)Has anyone used the Bardee range of organic fertilizer? I was just reading about it and sounds pretty good![]()
Diddoit's insane. Two or so weeks ago we were getting 23c nights and last night got to 6c. Mate out past Nanango hit negatives the other day. Woke up to a thick layer of frost.
Just been reading through and you may have been onto somthing with that Mick. Since this thread I have discovered canna bio has the same NPK in veg and flower and is high in KI've seen this before
Possibly too much p and or k in the mix
One other thing I've seen cause this is heat , but I don't imagine that's the problem this time of yr
Not sure I never really paid much attention until recentlyIs calcium normally that high with other nutrient brands? This one says 8.6,%, which is 2.5 times higher than its Nitrogen volume. Seems high?
Ok, thanks. Do you know why it's not considered to be a macro nutrient like NPK? Given its the highest value, I wonder why it's grouped as a micro nutrient? Assuming a plant uptakes roughly 2.5 times the amount of calcium to nitrogen, if we're supplying it for plants to use via the medium in that high ratio. Is it just a cannabis specific high calcium need, or do most " general purpose" fertilisers also include much higher calcium to nitrogen ratios?8.6% calcium is a good number. It should be in way higher amounts than nitrogen in soil anyway so as a general all purpose, this is a good ratio.
I've always wondered the same as I've got a few organic slow release products here that are 3:1:3 but roughly 9% calcium and the other is 4:2:2 with 12% calcium. Anither here has 2.5% nitrogen, 9% Ca and 8% S as well.Ok, thanks. Do you know why it's not considered to be a macro nutrient like NPK? Given its the highest value, I wonder why it's grouped as a micro nutrient? Assuming a plant uptakes roughly 2.5 times the amount of calcium to nitrogen, if we're supplying it for plants to use via the medium in that high ratio. Is it just a cannabis specific high calcium need, or do most " general purpose" fertilisers also include much higher calcium to nitrogen ratios?
By definition it should be a macro nutrient, surely. I mean why supply the high ratio of calcium into medium, unless plant uptakes it. I've never paid attention to ratios below NPK, as I "mistakenly" understood that macro nutrients would be the most important. Not that it changes anything I'll use, as I always buy the cheapest base nute brand I can get at the time. As my plants don't notice any difference between expensive and cheap nutes.I've always wondered the same as I've got a few organic slow release products here that are 3:1:3 but roughly 9% calcium and the other is 4:2:2 with 12% calcium. Anither here has 2.5% nitrogen, 9% Ca and 8% S as well.
I've noticed this mainly in slow release products, not so much immediate nutrients..
Ok, thanks. Do you know why it's not considered to be a macro nutrient like NPK? Given its the highest value, I wonder why it's grouped as a micro nutrient? Assuming a plant uptakes roughly 2.5 times the amount of calcium to nitrogen, if we're supplying it for plants to use via the medium in that high ratio. Is it just a cannabis specific high calcium need, or do most " general purpose" fertilisers also include much higher calcium to nitrogen ratios?
This is generally the ratio you will see in tissue as well as soil.I've always wondered the same as I've got a few organic slow release products here that are 3:1:3 but roughly 9% calcium and the other is 4:2:2 with 12% calcium. Anither here has 2.5% nitrogen, 9% Ca and 8% S as well.
I've noticed this mainly in slow release products, not so much immediate nutrients..