• We are officially moved over to Discourse.
    Autoflower Discourse"
    You will have to create a new login for the new site!
    This current Xenforo-based forum will be preserved as a read-only archive going forward with efforts to better categorize and tag original and canonical content.
    The URL autoflower.org will soon point to the new Discourse site; so we'll be back to business in a few days!
    Send Son of Hobbes a private message if you have any questions!

Growing in Coco tips and tricks?

Joined
Sep 11, 2019
Messages
19
Reputation
0
Reaction score
13
Points
0
Currently Smoking
Sour crack, 24 carat, Tru Blu, gelato.
I just started using Coco this run with some sour crack f and man bear x alien x triangle from mepshisto.. week one I've just top dressed with worm castings put the plugs in with mycos and asos sprinkled a little fish bone meal in the mix I planning on useing 3 part bottle nutes once every other watering and plain water with aloe juice on the off days does this sound like a winner ? What do you guys ph your water to? When should I start the 3 part feedings ! When do you start training your plants? I'm trying to get a largest most quality buds possible with what I'm working with
 
with coco, i feed right from the start with the tiniest amount of food i grow with remo newts also i ph mine after putting my food into it between 5.8 to 6.3 also it may be different with you adding fishbone etc but coco doesn't have water only days you feed them each time with newts
 
Awesome man thanks for the help so do you water everyday with yours I busted a 10lb block open last Saturday added 9 gallons of water next day I filled #5 plastic pots I'm giving it the old finger poke test it's still pretty damp I'm kind of worried about over watering I hear it dries out quick but is supposed to stay moist like that
 
I usually start feeding everyday around day 7-10, with mild nutes, and then feed everyday, upwards of 3-4 times daily when they start drinking more. I usually mix my coco with perlite/clay pebbles just to help with aeration and drainage. Even when plain coco is saturated with water, the oxygen content at the roots is still high, and doesn’t drown them like it would in soil.
 
Back
Top