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coco for mother plants?

yts farmer

Well-known member
Veteran
was wondering if coco is suitable for use with long term mother plants or is it best to use soil?

sorry gaius,should of asked this question in brah's thread.peace
 
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humble1

crazaer at overgrow 2.0
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Coco will work wonderfully for mothers and soil will too. I wonder if soil might lower the transpiration rate and slow the growth, prolonging the vigor of the plant..... hmmhh time to research!
 
C

CannaBuilding

I have used a combination of soil and coco and my mother plants have been in the same mix for about 10 months now and comming along fine.

I used about 30 percent soil and the rest coco and 1 tblsp per gallon for Dolomite and i just use maxi crop seaweed concentrate and they are all comming along just fine. oh yeah and htey all are no more then a foot high in 1 litre containers.

There was a thread around here some wher in regards on how to maintain miniture mother plants in soil, i jus tused the same procedure but with my coco soil mix.
 

Ono Nadagin

Active member
I use straight coco for my mothers for the last 6 months with no problems at all... the growth rate of plants in coco makes it much easier to get moms to put out a mass of clones imo...
 
C

CannaBuilding

what aizen said and also use a tds meter to measure ec ppm of the water used to flush before and after.

Goodluck :D
 
G

Guest

canna coco can be used right out of the bag. just don't go overboard on the nutes for a little bit..
 
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Rosy Cheeks

dancin' cheek to cheek
Veteran
Coir fiber will not compact over the course of the crop as with peat. Peat fibers erode from the force of watering, saline conditions, and the roots compacting the media. This robs the crop of valuable air space in the rootzone, and increases salt build-up (if mineral-based nutrients are used) as drainage is impeded. With coir fiber there is little if any compaction of the growing media over the grow cycle due to the higher content of lignins and cellulose found in the coarser fibers. This is perhaps even more valuable for motherplants, that normally stays longer in their mediums than plants vegged and flowered in a 3 month period. Therefore, logically, coco mothers will enjoy a healthier root zone after six months than soil mothers.
 

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