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Also, I think it is important to mention when black ash buds are water cured they turn white.
This would suggest something remains in the bud that is preventing total combustion that the water cure removes.
Keep it Clean!
No. none of this is applicable organics. Everything I said in my post is accurate and nothing in this post or; the 1 following it is accurate:
As pointed out so many times by experienced growers, an attempt to "flush" {which is a total misnomer & doesn;t even happen the way people think they understand it} will cause an over-saturated condition resulting in the death of soil micro-life & problems w/ the rhizosphere/plant roots
Think about recycling soil ~especially no-till recycling. If one harvests a finished plant & immediately transplants a new seedling w/o "feeding" in any form & then that plant grows out to harvest w/o a re-amend; how is the concept of flushing anything more than a myth.
The facts are that for the entire time I've been visiting this forum, there have been people attempting to dispel myths such as "flushing" & there seems to just be clown after clown coming out of the shadows bent on un-doing their efforts.
If you believe what you're saying, you are following some soluble nute paradigm {NPK myth} or you've had a bad experience w/ organics from something like sub-cools "recipe" {heavy feeder myth}
No dry amendments or liquid feed.
In the cigar world, the color of ash has everything to do with minerals in the soil and very little about quality.
From the "cigar adviser" http://www.cigaradvisor.com/articles/cigars-101/smoking/who-cares-about-your-ash
When I was back in the customer service department, I would receive an occasional customer call insisting their cigars were bad. In fact, they were always the worst cigars the customer ever tasted. No, even worse; they were so bad, they would make people violently ill to the point where hospitalization would be the only means of full recovery, and even still, that person would have to undergo decades of psychiatric therapy to free his mind of all the horrors the cigars had on his life. Of course I never believed these flamboyant claims; and trust me, I actually received calls just like this. But like a good employee, I pried into why they were the worst cigars in the world since that was my job. Nine times out of ten, the answer would be because the ash color was black instead of white.
Again, I seriously had people call and give me stories like these. The flashback to the dark days in the call center actually came to mind when I was speaking to a cigar blogger over the weekend named Peter. The issue came up since I was smoking a Cusano 18 and the ash was relatively dark, and I pointed it out to him. His reaction was as normal as the sun is bright; he slapped me on the back of the head and told me to stop whining. He was right though, I shouldn’t be complaining about a dark ash. There is no reason to considering ash color as an indication of the taste of a cigar. Ash color is perhaps the most insignificant thing you can analyze when smoking a cigar.
Let me explain: Ash color only has to do with the levels of magnesium contained in the tobacco leaves. The lighter the cigar ash, the more magnesium there is and the opposite is true of darker cigar ash. However, the level difference is so minimal in the cigar, it is nowhere near noticeable on your palate. Instead of looking at color, look at the overall ash quality. This tells the story of your whole cigar as you puff through it. Say your cigar ash is flaky. This usually means that you are smoking a short filler and it can become a nuisance since the ash will most likely break off constantly. If this is the case, don’t smoke and drive without a Road Warrior Ash Can. Also, if the cigar splits in the middle, this usually means the middle is not keeping pace with the perimeter of the cigar. When the wrapper is burning faster than the filler and binder, this is a caustic burn issue and can alter the flavor of the smoke, so you will not taste the blend the manufacturer intended. To fix this, just stop puffing for a few minutes so the inside can catch up.
If you really want to analyze the ash on your cigar to ensure a quality cigar, do not look at the ash color. It is insignificant in the grand scheme of things. Instead, pay close attention to how the ash splits and breaks off as you smoke in order to better analyze the quality of your burn. After all, the quality of the burn is what really defines the flavor of the cigar.
Cigar ash colors and associated minerals:
magnesium = white ash (the whiter it is--the more magnesium)
calcium = lighter color ash (chief element in cigar ash)
potassium = darker color for domestic, but white for cuban cigars
equal amounts of minerals = grey streaked with white veins
Hmmmm, I think overdose in ferts, particularly potassium is the primary culprit for dark ash in our world, after all--potassium phosphate is 0-50-30 (found in: Beasty Bloom, Cha-Ching, Moab, etc).
My $0.02, cheers!
Hi vapor. Any idea why the plant fully yellowed if there was too much fert in the soil? It showed N def and gradually yellowed from the bottom up until all leaves had faded and buds remain light green.
Thanks
1
Whatever. LOL
maybe there's just nothing wrong w/ black ash in & of itself ~as long as no off flavors accompany it.
Cool business model, huh? LOL
Again... this is why I don't run organics yet.
the black ash is accompanied by a bad burn and consequent unsatisfying taste.
Hi vapor. Any idea why the plant fully yellowed if there was too much fert in the soil? It showed N def and gradually yellowed from the bottom up until all leaves had faded and buds remain light green.
Thanks
1
When you have too much Potassium in your soil, it can lead to big troubles, like salt damage and acid fixation of the root system, as well as too much potassium can cause a calcium deficiency. Your fan leaves will show like a light to a dark yellow to whitish color in between the veins. Due to a molecular imbalance, potassium toxicity can cause a reduced uptake and lead to the deficiencies of Mg, and in some cases, Ca.