By continuing to use the website or clicking Accept you consent to our cookies and personal data policy and confirm that you are at least 18 year old. For details please see Privacy Policy and Terms
Both plants have the same soil mixture, except that one has sheep manure and the other has earthworm humus. Both solid organic fertilizer has similar organic matter content (20% sheep and 15% earthworm), yet the runoff EC of the plant with earthworm humus is way higher than that of the sheep manure.
Sheep manure: runoff ph= 6.1 and runoff EC: 800 ppm
Earthworm humus: runoff ph= 6.5 and runoff EC: 2000ppm
Two days ago I broke the main cola of the bigger plant. Probably such mistake will cost a few grams. The growth of the other stems is good. The other plant its a little bit shorter, but is growing well.
Purple (sheep manure). Runoff EC= 542 ppm and Ph= 7.1. Just fed her with liquid bat guano at 500 ppm.
White /earthworm humus). Runoff EC= 2000 ppm and Ph= 6.8. Extremely high EC within the medium, but the plant isnt showing nutrient excess. Compared to the purple pheno, the white pheno´s secondary stems are shorter.
Well, these two little dwarfs are entering their final week. Trichomes are getting milky, so probably gave them 1 week more and chop. Given the small size they attained, I will probably not use the available soil amendments in autoflowers anymore. It seems they get shocked after put them in their final pot with the soil mixture. Probably the earthworm humus that sell in this city have a nutrient deficiency given the short secondary stems in the white pheno compared to the purple pheno with sheep manure.
Purple flowers smell like sweet mango and normal flowers smell a mix of sweet and citrus. Highly resinous flowers. These little dwarfs hopefully will give me around 15 grams. Next time will run this genetic without soil amendments.
Good luck with your grow I hope you get the best taste of buds and healthy plants! Take care and stay lit! I will drop by sometimes to check on your process! Say hello if you ever visit my page!
Greetings from L.S.T 🙏🏼🌟
Thank you very much for trusting our strains, and sharing your experience.
And thank you very much again for the score of 10 out of 10!! 👏😍❤️
We hope you enjoy the harvest 👌
Sweet smokes!
-Apolo
Interesting! organic nutrients on indoor growth, I am contemplating combining the two: feeding worms with sheep manure. I had very good tomatoes in a ten liter container where I put some worms in and feeding the worms with some dried cow manure and whatever came out of the kitchen. Now I think maybe doing a bycicle trip along the dike outside Amsterdam to collect fresh sheep droppings and prepare some pots with a lot of sheep droppings in the soil en letting some worms in them, combined with some cat litter to prevent the nutrients from washing out.
Happy growing!
@Agricola_Borealis, Thanks mate! Always organic! So far, my best results in indoors growths were with Bokashi (https://www.thespruce.com/basics-of-bokashi-composting-2539742); however, also had good results with K-rich bat guano!