Super fun thread.
"Thanks," to the contributors.
Very useful discussion for my understanding of 'yellowing'.
"Thanks," to the contributors.
Very useful discussion for my understanding of 'yellowing'.
Totally agree. Below a certain mass of soil eg pot culture - many other considerations to make. I think the more important one being root binding.
I wonder now just how little nutes are actually needed when the microherd is a large and mature beasty like mine.
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I'm finding out more and more how true this is. Most all of my premature yellowing ladies are in root bound pots. The ones with extra root space to use in flower never yellow out before their time.hey mr F i would agree about rootbinding being a major factor. if your plant is rootbound then you are trying to run the race without legs really.
I'm two weeks in flower on a grow that has leaf yellowing. This is the 4 generation of this plant. The first two gens did very well with normal yellowing around week 6, and since my re-using my re-amended soil the problems arose. I'm pretty sure this grow has also been the victim of too hot of soil. In veg the main symptom was slow growth, but nice healthy looking leafs of dark green. Now in flower they budded early and stopped the stretch early. I wonder if an over abundance of nutrients leads to the plant not taking up the normal amounts than a more appropriate soil. And that leads to the early yellowing of the leafs.
The third generation also had similar symptoms but I wrote it off too mites/heat/ph. The yeilds went from 16 oz to 9. But now the only constant that remains seems to be the re-amended soil in gen 3&4.
The soil was a blood/bone/kelp meals with EWC, lime, and epsom salt, on the re-admend, I added these again and bloom/flower guano and greensand..........scrappy
hi ixnay, im no expert on this but i thought that above a certain level it entered the plant by osmosis/diffusion. this made sense to me because ammonia is incredibly soluble.
anyone??
p.s. love your siggy quote, very true
Wilson and Walker (1988)Go used independent methods to monitor urea uptake in their model system Chara. Controlling the fate of 14C-labeled urea in short-term uptake studies, they showed that urea uptake was concentration dependent and followed biphasic kinetics, indicating the existence of high- and low-affinity transport systems. In parallel, biphasic uptake kinetics in Chara were confirmed by electrophysiological measurements, in which a sodium-dependent inward current appeared in response to urea (Wilson et al., 1988Go; Walker et al., 1993Go). Finally, Wilson et al. (1988)Go concluded that high-affinity urea uptake in Chara is electrogenic, active, and, because of repressed uptake rates under high nitrogen levels, also under metabolic control.
No, plants can't self-regulate uptake of ammoniacal N (like ammonia and ammonium) and it becomes phytotoxic to roots (burns them) when the plant is not able to move enough sugar (from photosynthesis) into the roots to convert the ammoniacal N into plant usable forms. When there is a lack of sugar, or the uptake of ammoniacal N outpaces movement of sugar into roots, phytotoxicity sets in.
Ammoniacal N is what causes nutrient toxicity from N, not nitrates AFAIK. In terms of P, the plant can self-regulate uptake of phosphate anions and excess gets converted (at least most of it) and stored in plant tissue.
Plants can self-regulate uptake of (at least) nitrates, P, Ca, Mg, and probably K, but not ammoniacal N (e.g. ammonia and ammonium).
The plant will take what it needs when it needs it; if it takes in more than it needs it will store it in tissue for later use (esp. in terms of partially-mobile and fully mobile elements within plant tissue). Plant self-regulation of ion uptake doesn't mean the plant stops taking in 100% of said ions, but it can/does reduce uptake to small or great degrees.
FWIW, if ammonium and nitrate is co-applied the plant will take up the ammonium faster and use it faster. For the first few hours (ex. in a fresh hydro rez) the ammonium will increase uptake of nitrates, but then after a few hours ammonium will decrease uptake of nitrates by the plant. I assume this is because the ammonium is converted into amino acids and moved into the phloem, that in turn signals the plant to reduce uptake of N (as nitrates).
yeah, rootbound or potbound is when the roots outgrow a 'regular' type pot.
It's the longer term ingredients, dolomite lime, P, that cause the real problems with addbacks. Things get out of balance. Outdoor traditional gardening it's more an annual thing throwing lime and stuff about most of the action coming from compost. Beds get rested or cover cropped. Indoors we crop more frequently, and so liming etc can be overdone quickly. So how does one go about continuously using soil indoors, crop after crop?
The best advice I can give is the best things that worked for me with recycling soil. I wanted long term, and when I learned the Terra Preta soils of South America have been fertile for centuries - I figured that's what I want to attempt. The thread in the stickies covers that subject well. Some bottled ferts helped in the start as I learned my way. But it's better not using them, they cost, they were a symptom of my lack of confidence in the soil microbes. But it takes a while to get cocky...
watch me crash and burn bwa ha!
But to gain that soil biology that makes Terra Preta so good, the amazing diversity that functions in Terra Preta soils - how? I don't think you can directly create the same biology but what you can do is add your local biology, and that works just peachy! How? Worm castings, and compost teas. It's important to get these right, there's teas that kind of help and teas that will blow you away with what they can do for a troubled garden. But when the soil has too much nutes, teas are a bad route for the immediate crop.
Properly made castings, then properly made teas made with those castings, that's the only way to do it imo, the store bought castings and resultant teas are crap by comparison. Castings is easy, feed the worms well and just make sure the castings are finished properly. The tea article sticky will teach you how to make teas with them.
If plain water is helping your plants we've both diagnosed the problem correctly.
Half and half with something from a bag sounds a reasonable approach to helping the soil out if the bagged stuff isn't hot. I'm not familiar with US products though. A nice compost tea would go down a treat while that soil is resting between grows too.
If it were my soil I'd be hunting down some char for it. You can safely add up to 20% fine char to your wormbin and it will come out the other end in castings of pure soil magic. I shit you not.
So, you grow in beds and smart pots? Beds no till? Mulching is awesome for plants in beds. I think it'd help in pots even more to keep temps down for surface microbes and roots especially in veg.
What's your mobility like? Char crushing, water and tea prep etc can be a bit of labour involved. The char can be a one off thing (it's gonna outlast us all) or added incrementally, it is important to preamend. The worm route is awesome, just takes time. Teas and char, adding nutes hesitantly after the first rich mix... No more liming. Put eggshells in your castings and forget about liming. Good organic eggs help omega balance for your joints and bones and healing too so worth getting with/without a worm bin.
That's the advice I give everyone these days, it's gold. Learning about teas and learning about char. You get to read a lot of posts from a lot of smart people and get a real good picture of organics in the process. And beds and no till, I'm totally sold on this concept now. So much easier.
Beds on wheels would be awesome. How big do beds have to be to ensure a good microherd? MM worked it out. MM?
I got 16 sq ft, should be in range
Hope that helps, I'm pretty toasted.