Let's say you are growing in a soilless mix (coco coir, peat moss with perlite, etc.) which allows for easy drainage — i.e. it doesn't compact when heavily watered and won't suffocate the roots —, and your plants are experiencing a nutrient lockout from salt build-up/overfertilization. Would you flush them with pH'd water and allow them to dry thoroughly before feeding, or would feed them as soon as you've flushed with enough water? Or perhaps not feed it right after but still feed them before the mix dries completely (i.e. when you would normally water/feed them)?
It seems to me that the best approach in this case, seeing as a nutrient locked-out plant is effectively starved of nutrients for a while before it starts showing signs of a deficiency, is to remove as much salt/nutes as possible and feed them right after the water completely runs-off (which should be registering a very low ppm/ec). Waiting a little while seems unnecessary, and waiting days until it dries seems like it would continue to starve until you finally feed them. What are your thoughts?
It seems to me that the best approach in this case, seeing as a nutrient locked-out plant is effectively starved of nutrients for a while before it starts showing signs of a deficiency, is to remove as much salt/nutes as possible and feed them right after the water completely runs-off (which should be registering a very low ppm/ec). Waiting a little while seems unnecessary, and waiting days until it dries seems like it would continue to starve until you finally feed them. What are your thoughts?
Comment