Fox farm ocean forest soil?

cmbajr

Active Member
A lot of people tell me to mix soils for each stage in growing but I can't really afford all that soil... I wanted to get a 12quart bag of fox farm ocean forest soil and plant my germinated seeds in the soil and add fox farm nutrients during flowering and that's all with the soil... Would this work from vegetation to harvest? And what kind of yield should I expect? Im growing LSD and blue cheese...
 

donniemcm

Well-Known Member
It will absolutely work.... as far as yield there are WAY too many variables.... lights, pot size, veg time, etc etc
 

Wetdog

Well-Known Member
12qts?

That would be 3 gallons=1 sorta small container to grow/flower in=1 plant and not much yield.

You might want to re think this.

Wet
 

grandpa 1949

Well-Known Member
I must of missed something. All I saw was 12qt of FF OF. No mention of how many plants. I gonna guess 1?
But that's what I use.
 

BBbubblegum

Well-Known Member
Theres too many variables, but it mainly has to do with lighting. I've heard .8g (I think)/W of lighting. But it changes wether its CFL,MH,or HPS. Alot is genetic based too,and how long its vegged for (If indoor).
 

missnu

Well-Known Member
I use FFOF, but you are going to need some nutrients for flower..you can get by veg without them as long as it isn't for long, but you have to give them something during flower
 

Wetdog

Well-Known Member
I must of missed something. All I saw was 12qt of FF OF. No mention of how many plants. I gonna guess 1?
But that's what I use.
OP mentioned LSD and blue cheese.

I can't see 12qts being enough for 1 plant from seed, no matter the brand, much less 2.

Wet
 

Tony Sativa

Member
I'd rather go with the happy frog soil and add my own nutes and perlite as needed. I like the botanicare pure granular nutes and add when you transplant from each container. You should start with 4 inch then to 6 inch square containers then go up in size to 9 and 12 or larger square depending on what size you want to finish flowering in. This will help your roots grow faster and save you some space when they are small. Figure on a gallon of soil per every foot of plant and bigger pots equal better yields if done proper.
 

Nullis

Moderator
Which Fox Farm fertilizers do you actually plan on using for bloom? A lot of them, and most of the liquid ones, don't strictly fit the definition of organic (i.e. they contain synthetic chelates, chemical salts, lacking organic matter/microbes). Big Bloom is the only [liquid] one, AFAIK.
 

Total Head

Well-Known Member
i'm not familiar with those particular strains but imo ocean forest is a bit hot for most seeds to get a good start in. i think you'd do yourself a favor to start the seeds in a milder soil and transplant to the ffof once they have a decent root mass. it will also stretch the soil a bit further. it doesn't have to be a fancy starter soil if you're worried about cost.
 
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