Research the term "leaching fraction"...and you will find things like:
When the build-up of soluble salts in the soil becomes or is expected to become excessive, the salts can be leached by applying more water than that needed by the crop during the growing season. This extra water moves at least a portion of the salts below the root zone by deep percolation (leaching). Leaching is the key factor in controlling soluble salts brought in by the irrigation water. Over time, salt removal by leaching must equal or exceed the salt additions from the applied water or salts will build up and eventually reach damaging concentrations. The questions that arise are how much water should be used for leaching and when should leachings be applied?
and....
Leaching is the application of water or fertilizer
solution beyond what can be held by the substrate.
Applying extra water is recommended to thoroughly
wet the substrate, and to remove excess salts from the
substrate. The leaching fraction is the volume of water
that drains from the substrate relative to the volume of
water applied. For example, if you apply 15 fluid
ounces (0.44 liters) of water, and 3 fluid ounces (0.08
liters) comes out of the bottom of the pot then 3 divided
by 15, then times 100 equals a 20% leaching fraction.
In other words, 20% of the water applied to the plant
came out of the bottom of the pot.
It is generally taught that you should have
between a 10% and 20% leaching fraction with every
watering. However, research has shown that leaching is
not necessary for long periods of time if you have a
good water source (RO or rain water is ideal) and the
fertilizer you use does not contain any harmful salts like
sodium or chloride. There are reasons to leach pots,
usually because the fertilizer concentration that is
applied to the crop is too high for the growth rate, or the
water quality is poor, and unused salts (like calcium,
magnesium, or sodium) build up in the substrate. In
general, whether or not you leach should be based on
soil test information showing salt levels actually
building up in the substrate, rather than because
somebody tells you too.
Leaching rates also affect the optimal fertilizer
concentration for your crop. Research has shown that
the same nutrient levels could be maintained in a peat
based substrate if a solution containing 400 ppm
nitrogen were applied with 50% leaching or a solution
containing 100 ppm nitrogen were applied with 0%
leaching. This research also showed that applying a
solution containing 400 ppm nitrogen with 0% leaching
rapidly lead to salts building up in the substrate to
unacceptable levels, while applying a solution
containing 100 ppm nitrogen with 50% leaching lead to
nutrient deficiencies because there wasn’t enough of the
fertilizer remaining in the pot because of the excess
leaching.
Source: staugorchidsociety.org/PDF/IPASubstrates.pdf
Moral of the story: If you normally water with little to zero runoff (dry saucer...no leaching), then big mighty flush(es) before harvest is a must; ahhh, but not necessarily true if your practice is to water with a leaching fraction of 10-20%--something that most organic growers seem to do. You might say, that 10-20% is our "flushing".
BTW, calcium, magnesium & sodium are "organic" salts of sorts.
Got busted by the mtl police today in a mmar injunction protected personnal grow for two patients (and a couple very sick ones).
12 plants over count....they said kill them this week there....
what?
no arrest, immediate destruction etc...???
i have faith in humanity once again.
(or in my paranoia of electronic surveilance...)
Starting to have a few worthy ones under my belt to tell the grandkids who will laugh at the time where cannabis was illegal.
One love,
inna di midst a di belly a di beast, I an I still witness seh DAvid will always slew Goliath!
if cops r against it it's probly good!Ras Mason,
Sorry to hear about the bust, but sounds like it worked out so far.
I just wanted to proclaim that a legalization measure just got certified to be on the Oregon ballot this November!
I have not read the measure yet, but it sounds like it is very restrictive and controlled. Even the cops said they are against it, of course, and said it will make a few people very rich.
Oh well, baby steps I suppose.
ThaiBliss
Taking the Flush to the extreme. Anyone ever heard of Colombian Gold?
it was always the strongest cleanest example of timwarp... The folks who have tryd and seen it dont right understand..
Not one drop of fertilizer yet in next sentence in soil rich compost and almost a 10 foot plant ??? most fences are 6 feet tall due to local by laws hell pretty much law... Yet looking at your picture???? were you laying on the ground lmao cmon dude were stoners here not retards ,, here i show you a members tree must be 4 feet tall what you think ????Here is my outdoor senescence example:
View Image
Not one drop of fertilizer since July 1st. Minimal fertilizer before July 1st. Just enough to keep it green while getting it big. It is in soil rich in compost, which normally has a nitrogen deficit. It took some manure and 5-1-1 fish emulsion at about 1/10th recommended strength to keep it from yellowing while growing. The plant was able to get about 10 feet tall. This is not an extreme example. It is a normal, for me, compromise between heft and quality.
ThaiBliss
Your talking yield we are talking quality.....There is a balance to find when approaching senescence and yield/quality. We still want a plant to finish properly{It is just our properly finished line has shifted over the years due to experience} So is proper finish running your plants full of ferts to the very end to get a big yield? Experience has shown me there is a more enjoyable end product if we do not push our plant hard with ferts to the end, Yet walk the fine line you find over time and many grows growing /dialing the same clone. If you have ever had the opportunity to meet a grower who does this and is good at it. Well I see folks say, i don't care what the yield is i want to smoke a plant/bud like that how do i do it. So i do not mean to talk down to you or say your weed sucks. Experience tells me you do not even know enough to know you dont understand/ have experienced what we are talking about. Forget about money forget about yield and grow me a plant that is just about loving cannabis and having the best you can for yourself. That is a rare spot to find these days most grower i meet are focused on yield and money as number one. not me. grow on......
Can you cite any other plants that might grow in your garden that perform best (read: produce their best 'quality') when their nutritional needs are neglected? I can't.
http://www.kindgreenbuds.com/marijuana-grow-guide/spray-n-grow/Dr fever...
....sorry to go off subject here, but what is the reason for the zinc foliage spray you speak of for week 3-4?