It does much better than when i was using horticultural powder garden lime and epsom salt.Dolomite lime is one of the additions that helped me get more Ca and Mg to my sativas as they dissolve slowly, for longer flowering sativas this is perfect.
If i dont go too long without adding Sulfate of Potash and a little more Super Triple Phosphate somewhere midway through flower, mine finish looking really nice now.
The biggest issue i come across is now a little over fertilization on some as i play around with the ratios a little, the 2nd run of Green Haze pheno Destroyer x OTH is looking quite rough from lockout of adding some Potash at uppotting as it went into flower. Once over ferted it's really difficult diagnosing deficiencies as it goes through flower because the leaves already look terrible removing the excess from the soil.
Halfway through as the leaves started looking differently worse, i added some All Purpose Dr Earth, a spoon full of Potash, and a teaspoon or so of S T Phosphate and all the new growth looks like it should, lime green and spot/burn free.
I will soon be starting the remaining (8 i think) GT Panama. If i can get 6 of those above ground, i like my chance of finding Two to bang together.
If i could pick the outcome, I'd love an extra frosty low yielding Thai vine and another extra fluffy, super resinous Panama one.
Regarding the GT Pan cutting I had, the clone run was certainly subpar, bad nutrient ratios kept clones from making it, and most certainly affected the final product, it doesn't have the head punch the first run had.
I was also practicing really terrible procedures for preserving genetics, because it had worked mostly very well so far. Now I'm using a tent with a rack in it, this is a mix of seedlings and clones from plants that look promising, if i get surprised by growth or anything later in flower, reveg usually works unless i messed up big time on the nutrients.