Coco medium instead of organic mix to make subcool's super soil

nasar

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone here at RIU any one tried using COCO medium to make SUBCOOL'S SUPER SOIL MIX????

The reason to start this thread is to get ideas and views of creating a new super mix so we can achieve even better growth rates compared to SUPER SOIL if possible any help would be appreciated and maybe i could try it and show every one pictures of my grow and experiments.:peace:
 

Yeah Right

Active Member
Coco has zero nutrients. That alone pretty much takes away the concept of planting and watering alone. If you read Sub's article, he talks about just watering without adding nutrients. You could use coco, but you'd also have to be using nutrients. Sounds to me like more money spent. I've yet to try super soil, but it's hard to argue with the results.
 

nasar

Well-Known Member
thanks for the reply i know coco has no nutrients in it but some 1 said its possible to use the rest of the ingredients from subcool's recipe and make a mix.
 

StlSoldier531

Active Member
Hey Yeah Right, what strain was you smoking when you typed that dumb answer?? Because what ever it is...it must be some good stuff because it has you STUPID stoned. Of course it doesn't have any nutrients and obviously the soil doesn't have ENOUGH either, because if it did, that would defeat the whole purpose of subcool inventing a recipe in the first place for a WATER ONLY grow...that's why you ADD the nutrients so that they will be present, with the only difference is...Coco holds its form and texture much longer than peat based soils and it allows more oxygen to the root zone .... come on man get a clue..lol...

If you had READ Subcool's article, you would have known that he does ADD nutrients in the form of AMENDING the soil ;)

To answer the poster...Yes Coco can be used in place of soil...In fact Coco would be better. It is excellent at retaining Oxygen, nutrients and water (without getting soggy). Dolomite lime will preven any Cal/Mag deficiencies...
 

TheLastWood

Well-Known Member
Yeahright is right, you could do it but it would not be the same. The main ingredient in super spoil is "quality or premium grade organic soil" also coco will not hold any nutrients. When enough water is run through it it will leech them all. This is actually what makes it such a good medium and usable for hydroponics. (Plus the added oxygen to the roots and explosive growth rates)

I have asked the same question and think you should try it, it will be diluted tho and you will need to fertilize. Without the 8 bags of roots organic soil, you will be lacking a lot of the nutrients you are trying to "build upon". The point of super soil is to use only water, so while you will still end up with a very good soil, it will not be nearly the same.
 

TheLastWood

Well-Known Member
also, I'm a very avid and happy coco user, but I think soon I will be switching to super soil, it seems amazing. I have also wondered about using coco to combine the effects of two "super mediums". On the other hand, if you were just trying to create a very good soil with excellent drainage you would be succesful, and you probably wouldn't have to dilute it as subs method entails (by only using 1/2 a pot of super soil topped with roots). But you would have to fertilize as the nutrients were used up
 

Boyz N Da Hood

Well-Known Member
I was wondering this exact thing but couldn't you just add a top dressing In the later stages? I ask cuz I ran into AskEd's coco guide at GC and check it out.. I dunno but I'd like to try it out n see

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[FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]Quote:
[FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]Originally Posted by J R [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]Ed...thanks for the coco info, it is great. Can you talk about the nutes you use in bloom?

N,P,K,Mg,Ca,S....and the PPM.
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[FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]Thanks JR! I've tried a few different nutes for blooming including Fox Farms Tiger Bloom (with Big Bloom) and the Botanicare's CNS17 for coco series (Bloom, Ripe, CalMag, Sweet, etc.).

They all work well though both needed calcium supplementing beyond the CalMag in my case. Each plant can have it's own feed schedule. I had a Cali Hash that would devour anything I threw at her, she required nutes every watering at about 900ppm.

My LSD on the otherhand would tox up at 600ppm if I feed her every watering, so she was alternating between waterings. She was fed a little heavy going into flower and I gave her straight water for 2 weeks before she was ready to feed again for example. I chose that over flushing just to see how much nutes coco could store. With a light feeder it's quite a bit.

Lately I've been using organics. My mix requires nothing more than water until mid flowering, at which point I add a top dressing of some bone meal, bat guano, lime, greensand, and kelp meal. This provides a major blast of phosphorous, potassium, calcium, magnesium, iron and micro nutrients. So far I have one plant about to harvest with this feed (Super Lemon Haze - buds are really fat and triched out), and I have 4 other plants that are 5-10 weeks into flower using this. So far they all LOVE it (prettiest plants yet) except one very stubborn sativa.




[/FONT][FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]Quote:
[FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]Originally Posted by Saaz [/FONT]
[FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]So Ed did you have a "recipe" for the organic coco? I'd like to try my hand with plain water.

As a daily hand waterer I drain to waste and end up mixing up a bunch of nutes every week. I did hit on keeping a bucket of concentrated nutes that one could quickly scoop a quart out and make three or more gallons of appropriate strength solution @ 1.4-2.0 EC. I initially pH this concentrate at 5.8 and diluting with RO it rarely requires further adjusting.

I'll see about some pics for the other thread.
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[FONT=Tahoma, Calibri, Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif]Hey Saaz! I hear ya on the nute mix, that's one thing I loved about the CNS17 line, 15-20 ml + CalMag in RO would nail it on 5.8 with no adjustments needed. Real convenient!

Here's my current coco mix recipe: (2 gal formula):
6 qt - coco
2 qt - perlite
1.5 oz - blood meal
1.5 oz - bone meal
1.5 oz - kelp meal
1.5 oz - green sand
1 oz - epsom salt
2 oz - dolomite
1 oz - cottonseed meal (NPK slow release)
1 oz - dry molasses (bacteria food)
2 oz - mycorrhizae fungi
* all of these amendments have micro nutrient


When I flip tp 12/12, I transplant from 1 gal to 5 gal using the same mix except no blood meal. This will provide another 3-4 weeks of food.

This mix BY FAR is the best I have tried, I've been tweaking this one for months. Kelp meal was the only hard item to find.

Let this mix 'cook' for a few weeks if you can by letting it sit around after it's mixed, but it's not necessary really. At least I have no issues using it right away.

Good luck man, let me know how this works out!
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Old thread, but id like to bump it in hopes anyone has had good experiences with something like askeds mix?
a mix of 60% coco coir 40% perilte one hand full of bat guno with trace elements and proper npk for vegitve which may have to be a mix, and one hand full of worm castings feeds for 1 mounth. I grew a 48 inch tall plant in one mounth from seed then flowered And yeilded 4 ounces of quilty chemdawg
 
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