Foxfarm questions

Dr.J20

Well-Known Member
Where could I look to buy non ‘plain’ water if that’s an alternative
naw dude, what i mean is, if you don't want to have to add nutrients or anything to your water (i.e., just leave it 'plain') then you should look into supersoils which have been amended with nutrients and microbial life so as to do the feeding work for you--with a well made supersoil you really don't need to top dress your soil or add any liquid nutrients to your water (indeed, since supersoil is an organic method, adding salt-based liquid fertilizer to your water would kill off your microbial hoard and undo the effectiveness of your supersoil).

container size is directly related to root/plant size; you can take a plant from start to finish in a party cup, but because the plant will consume all of the nutrients that are in the amount of soil that fits in a party cup, you'll have to add nutrients to your medium. You can also put a plant in a pot so big with so much food that it will never be exhausted in one grow. you're in charge of how you do it--learn how plants grow and make the decisions that fit your lifestyle and goals.

be easy,

:leaf: :peace: :leaf:
 

JimmiP

Well-Known Member
and for the first entire grow itll be fine but if you want the best quality i would get the fox farm dirty dozen set
Not needed for a first time grower. Or any other either. Start in seedling mix move to happy frog(mixed with extra perlite-25-33%) then to ocean forest (again mixed with extra perlite) and then up pot to ocean forest again and use a little fox farm bog bloom until its ready to cut.
Unless something drastically craptastick happens, a new grower will make it through the grow, get a decent yield and get to learn how the plant actually grows. And they won't get overwhelmed with ideas that this or that bottle of something or another is going to give them tops the size of a blimp.

Also it costs a lot less.
 

Dr.J20

Well-Known Member
Not needed for a first time grower. Or any other either. Start in seedling mix move to happy frog(mixed with extra perlite-25-33%) then to ocean forest (again mixed with extra perlite) and then up pot to ocean forest again and use a little fox farm bog bloom until its ready to cut.
Unless something drastically craptastick happens, a new grower will make it through the grow, get a decent yield and get to learn how the plant actually grows. And they won't get overwhelmed with ideas that this or that bottle of something or another is going to give them tops the size of a blimp.

Also it costs a lot less.
i mean, yeah, ok, but the same is true about miracle grow. you've just shifted from bottles of snake oil to bags of it. you need a mix with a base, some aearation, and some food. coco-ewc-perlite, sphagnum-cow manure-pumice, the more diverse your mix, the better, but if the bar is just getting from seed to smoke then any basic medium and a little patience should get someone to cropout. the plant wants to grow, after all!
 
naw dude, what i mean is, if you don't want to have to add nutrients or anything to your water (i.e., just leave it 'plain') then you should look into supersoils which have been amended with nutrients and microbial life so as to do the feeding work for you--with a well made supersoil you really don't need to top dress your soil or add any liquid nutrients to your water (indeed, since supersoil is an organic method, adding salt-based liquid fertilizer to your water would kill off your microbial hoard and undo the effectiveness of your supersoil).

container size is directly related to root/plant size; you can take a plant from start to finish in a party cup, but because the plant will consume all of the nutrients that are in the amount of soil that fits in a party cup, you'll have to add nutrients to your medium. You can also put a plant in a pot so big with so much food that it will never be exhausted in one grow. you're in charge of how you do it--learn how plants grow and make the decisions that fit your lifestyle and goals.

be easy,

:leaf: :peace: :leaf:
Thank you. I’m gonna look into supersoil, that seems like the move
 

JimmiP

Well-Known Member
i mean, yeah, ok, but the same is true about miracle grow. you've just shifted from bottles of snake oil to bags of it. you need a mix with a base, some aearation, and some food. coco-ewc-perlite, sphagnum-cow manure-pumice, the more diverse your mix, the better, but if the bar is just getting from seed to smoke then any basic medium and a little patience should get someone to cropout. the plant wants to grow, after all!
Yep, that's what I'm getting at. The op is a new grower. And at this point the most important thing for them to do is build a relationship with the plant and learn from it. They can learn to manipulate it more as they progress. Too many times new growers fail because they try to do too much without knowing why they should or should not.
The best advice I could ever offer to a new grower (and almost no one follows) would be to just put a seed in the ground and watch it grow. You can learn a whole lot by just observing what a plant will do when left alone. Especially when you are new... And sometimes even when you have been doing it a while.
 

JimmiP

Well-Known Member
i mean, yeah, ok, but the same is true about miracle grow. you've just shifted from bottles of snake oil to bags of it. you need a mix with a base, some aearation, and some food. coco-ewc-perlite, sphagnum-cow manure-pumice, the more diverse your mix, the better, but if the bar is just getting from seed to smoke then any basic medium and a little patience should get someone to cropout. the plant wants to grow, after all!
Also, those mixes have all of that. And they are not (ick) miracle grow.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
naw dude, what i mean is, if you don't want to have to add nutrients or anything to your water (i.e., just leave it 'plain') then you should look into supersoils which have been amended with nutrients and microbial life so as to do the feeding work for you--with a well made supersoil you really don't need to top dress your soil or add any liquid nutrients to your water (indeed, since supersoil is an organic method, adding salt-based liquid fertilizer to your water would kill off your microbial hoard and undo the effectiveness of your supersoil).

container size is directly related to root/plant size; you can take a plant from start to finish in a party cup, but because the plant will consume all of the nutrients that are in the amount of soil that fits in a party cup, you'll have to add nutrients to your medium. You can also put a plant in a pot so big with so much food that it will never be exhausted in one grow. you're in charge of how you do it--learn how plants grow and make the decisions that fit your lifestyle and goals.

be easy,

:leaf: :peace: :leaf:
I'm almost using water only now, and top dressing. I'm getting closer, but am still always behind the game a bit since the organics take awhile to break down. You really need to be kinda physic and feed before they need it.

Here's my latest plant that I recently harvested. I was kinda lazy and didn't feed it when I should have so it was kinda starving, but this no-till thing is a learning process for me. I'm using 15 gal plastic pots.

I've harvested this plant at different times. This one I went a few days past the pics and harvested at day 59. I've harvested some earlier and later. There's another one in there that's at like 4 1/2 weeks, and a few in my veg tent. It's a clone only Green Crack that I would like to keep going. Actually it's the only strain I'm growing right now. Sorry the pics suck. They were taken on an old ass IPad that I can't even get updates for anymore, lol.

IMG_4495.JPG
IMG_4501.JPG
IMG_4488.JPG
 
Yep, that's what I'm getting at. The op is a new grower. And at this point the most important thing for them to do is build a relationship with the plant and learn from it. They can learn to manipulate it more as they progress. Too many times new growers fail because they try to do too much without knowing why they should or should not.
The best advice I could ever offer to a new grower (and almost no one follows) would be to just put a seed in the ground and watch it grow. You can learn a whole lot by just observing what a plant will do when left alone. Especially when you are new... And sometimes even when you have been doing it a while.
We have one growing w a lil fan & lamp light above it. My roommate’s project, I’ll get to see this one grow for a couple months before I start fr
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
This what we rocking rn y’all take a look
You can put it under any light right now. I've having fun with this houseplant. It's got a 23 watt daylight LED in a lamp, and it gets some sunlight during the day, but not a lot of sunlight. CFL's will work too, but you'll need them closer. To give you an idea, I just took this pic a minute ago.
IMG_4513.JPG
 
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