Nutrient Flush

Slicksmitty

Member
Never overfeed, I would always have lush green leaves after 8 weeks of flower,You learn that hydro plants dont need much food to stay healthy.I often think some strains would grow just fine with tap water and a little calmag lol.
Tap water is fine you just let it set for a bit to allow chlorine to evapoate.
 

GanjaJack

Well-Known Member
Do I have to repeat this every other day?

Do you flush tomatoes before harvest?

Do you flush any vegetables before harvest?

Do they flush tobacco before harvest?

If you have a problem with chlorophyll it's not flushing that's the problem, it's the cure.

Also, most plants start shutting down towards the end of their flowering, and will use up available nutrients at the leaf rather than what the roots sit in. So plants will tend to use up the nutrients you want to flush out.
At this point they are focusing on allowing their flowers to live as long as possible, to ensure as many seeds as possible mature to propagate the next generation.
 

GanjaJack

Well-Known Member
General rule of thumb.

If you can drink your tap water then it’s fine for plants.

wait until you realise you can use it straight from the tap As chlorine is used by plants as a nutrient lol.

I haven’t “off gased” My tap water for years.

the only time I have ever "off gassed" was when I was keeping Discus fish, I set up a 20 gallon bare tank with nothing but water so off gas the tremendous amounts of chlorine that they put in that towns municipal water.

Before I did that, the chlorine killed my fish dead... I was so pissed. Discus are wicked sensitive to chlorine but they can tolerate lower levels a bit more. Usually before fall rains they would dump a bunch of chlorine in....
 

jondamon

Well-Known Member
the only time I have ever "off gassed" was when I was keeping Discus fish, I set up a 20 gallon bare tank with nothing but water so off gas the tremendous amounts of chlorine that they put in that towns municipal water.

Before I did that, the chlorine killed my fish dead... I was so pissed. Discus are wicked sensitive to chlorine but they can tolerate lower levels a bit more. Usually before fall rains they would dump a bunch of chlorine in....
I used to have a tropical tank myself but used SEACHEM PRIME to neutralise chlorine

when I cycled my tank I did it with ammonia from work so didn’t sacrifice any fish either.

nothing majorly sensitive in my tank though. Bolivian Rams, tetras, Armano shrimps and pleco.
 

GanjaJack

Well-Known Member
I used to have a tropical tank myself but used SEACHEM PRIME to neutralise chlorine

when I cycled my tank I did it with ammonia from work so didn’t sacrifice any fish either.

nothing majorly sensitive in my tank though. Bolivian Rams, tetras, Armano shrimps and pleco.

I'm a cheap bastard, I never buy things when I can achieve the same result for free. LOL! No matter how inconvenient free might be.
 

jondamon

Well-Known Member
I'm a cheap bastard, I never buy things when I can achieve the same result for free. LOL!
I had no way at the time to store 40L of water for offgasing lol.

so I would add the SeaChem prime to the tank prior to filling back the 20% after water changes.

once I went to a fully planted tank though the nitrate levels etc stayed pretty good and didn’t require as frequent water changes.
 

GanjaJack

Well-Known Member
I used to have a tropical tank myself but used SEACHEM PRIME to neutralise chlorine

when I cycled my tank I did it with ammonia from work so didn’t sacrifice any fish either.

nothing majorly sensitive in my tank though. Bolivian Rams, tetras, Armano shrimps and pleco.

Speaking of plecos... a friend of mine grew one in a 100 gallon tank, the thing was near 2 foot long, if not 3.... when he would feed him, it would swim upside down to the top of the water and suck the pellets off the top of the water....

And he would let you itch his belly and stuff, WICKED COOL FISH!!!!
 

Star Dog

Well-Known Member
Do I have to repeat this every other day?

Do you flush tomatoes before harvest?

Do you flush any vegetables before harvest?

Do they flush tobacco before harvest?

If you have a problem with chlorophyll it's not flushing that's the problem, it's the cure.

Also, most plants start shutting down towards the end of their flowering, and will use up available nutrients at the leaf rather than what the roots sit in. So plants will tend to use up the nutrients you want to flush out.
At this point they are focusing on allowing their flowers to live as long as possible, to ensure as many seeds as possible mature to propagate the next generation.
With that said you'll have an idea of the sap ec?
Screenshot_20210807-171549.png
I've got so sick of this pish being spouted I've gathered and tested the sap on a flushed plant and one not :bigjoint:
Jfc grown to maturity then 4 days of water to finish.

Care to guess the ec?
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
With that said you'll have an idea of the sap ec?
View attachment 4960042
I've got so sick of this pish being spouted I've gathered and tested the sap on a flushed plant and one not :bigjoint:
Jfc grown to maturity then 4 days of water to finish.

Care to guess the ec?
I'll just post of both of these replies over here too:
Interesting thinking!

Sap is the blood of a plant. Just like a human's blood it consists of many things including electrolytes, nutrients and waste. No matter what you feed the plant it will have those. It has to have those to survive.
No two metabolisms are the same. If you were to measure my blood now and your blood we would have different levels of Sodium, Potassium, Calcium, Magnesium et cetera. Same with plants.

I really commend you for thinking about this and formulating an experiment even though I disagree with your conclusion.
 
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