Best soil mix for blue dream? New grower here

Hey huys, im a new grower, I recently bought blue dream seeds and was wondering what was the best soil mix for cannabis, something that can allow me to grow my plants with vigor without much use of nutrients. I know Ill have to feed it but im not that much of an expert on it so something that can be managable. My first ever plant had some poor soil that gave it nutrient deficiencies from the start, its gree very slowly and poorly so im open for any suggestions. Thx bros, im exited to learn and show u my progress
 

BobThe420Builder

Well-Known Member
A beginner grower shouldn't use an all in one soil until you know what yer doing

Get Promix HP and Mega Crop

Bout as easy as you can get
 
Plagron Allmix is a good choice for a beginner and it’s organic. The lightmix is synthetic and is weaker so you would have to feed more. I tested the soil ph of organic plant magic, biobizz lightmix and a lightmix from Intense nutrients. They were all surprisingly acidic, about 5.6-5.8. But plagron was higher above 6 (greenish if using ph test kit, opposed to bright yellow for the other brands). The ph range is vital, the plants will grow with vigour and use the available nutrients when correct. Plants will lack lustre and look partly deficient when using acidic soils, leading to people thinking to use more fertiliser. They also tend to develope magnesium deficiency a few weeks in. Calmag will help but the problem will persist, even mixing dolomite lime doesn’t totally correct the problem as it takes time to break down. So it’s very important to start with a soil that has the correct ph. The plagron brands had the correct ph levels but the ec levels where off the scale, ec truncheon flashing rapid at 3.6. In my opinion we have been getting ripped off for years, buying inferior branded soils. I suggest mixing a good quality lightly fertilised organic soil with coco, charge (blood, fish and bone as an alternative), dolomite lime and bat guano. All mixed at lower dosages to what’s recommended. Then just water, occasionally with enzymes and a couple of microbe teas. Only when weeks down the line when plants show signs of using up the nutrients do I make the girls a bat guano tea lol. If you use bottled fertiliser like I do at times, use organic (it’s brown and smelly) opposed to synthetic which is clear and pretty much odourless. I started out using organic feed, but then used synthetics for years. Then I started flavour chasing and went back organic and it’s true what they say about taste. All the best, just remember to feed lightly.
 
Oh and by the way, always leave water in tank for at least 24 hours before using. For chlorine etc to evaporate and for the water temperature to be kinder. Straight tap water is not good for microbes apparently, personally I’ve never looked through the microscope.
 
Plagron Allmix is a good choice for a beginner and it’s organic. The lightmix is synthetic and is weaker so you would have to feed more. I tested the soil ph of organic plant magic, biobizz lightmix and a lightmix from Intense nutrients. They were all surprisingly acidic, about 5.6-5.8. But plagron was higher above 6 (greenish if using ph test kit, opposed to bright yellow for the other brands). The ph range is vital, the plants will grow with vigour and use the available nutrients when correct. Plants will lack lustre and look partly deficient when using acidic soils, leading to people thinking to use more fertiliser. They also tend to develope magnesium deficiency a few weeks in. Calmag will help but the problem will persist, even mixing dolomite lime doesn’t totally correct the problem as it takes time to break down. So it’s very important to start with a soil that has the correct ph. The plagron brands had the correct ph levels but the ec levels where off the scale, ec truncheon flashing rapid at 3.6. In my opinion we have been getting ripped off for years, buying inferior branded soils. I suggest mixing a good quality lightly fertilised organic soil with coco, charge (blood, fish and bone as an alternative), dolomite lime and bat guano. All mixed at lower dosages to what’s recommended. Then just water, occasionally with enzymes and a couple of microbe teas. Only when weeks down the line when plants show signs of using up the nutrients do I make the girls a bat guano tea lol. If you use bottled fertiliser like I do at times, use organic (it’s brown and smelly) opposed to synthetic which is clear and pretty much odourless. I started out using organic feed, but then used synthetics for years. Then I started flavour chasing and went back organic and it’s true what they say about taste. All the best, just remember to feed lightly.
Thx man
 

Kaywhy

Well-Known Member
Fox farm ocean forest, bloom nutrients and a bottle of cal mag. Any bloom nutrients will work. You won't need anything except water untill you get to flower stage. Once you hit flower stage to the lightest recommended dose for bloom nutrients and calmag. Step up the dosage as your plant matures remembering less is more and your golden. Simplest way I know of
 

Nutty sKunK

Well-Known Member
Plagron Allmix is a good choice for a beginner and it’s organic. The lightmix is synthetic and is weaker so you would have to feed more. I tested the soil ph of organic plant magic, biobizz lightmix and a lightmix from Intense nutrients. They were all surprisingly acidic, about 5.6-5.8. But plagron was higher above 6 (greenish if using ph test kit, opposed to bright yellow for the other brands). The ph range is vital, the plants will grow with vigour and use the available nutrients when correct. Plants will lack lustre and look partly deficient when using acidic soils, leading to people thinking to use more fertiliser. They also tend to develope magnesium deficiency a few weeks in. Calmag will help but the problem will persist, even mixing dolomite lime doesn’t totally correct the problem as it takes time to break down. So it’s very important to start with a soil that has the correct ph. The plagron brands had the correct ph levels but the ec levels where off the scale, ec truncheon flashing rapid at 3.6. In my opinion we have been getting ripped off for years, buying inferior branded soils. I suggest mixing a good quality lightly fertilised organic soil with coco, charge (blood, fish and bone as an alternative), dolomite lime and bat guano. All mixed at lower dosages to what’s recommended. Then just water, occasionally with enzymes and a couple of microbe teas. Only when weeks down the line when plants show signs of using up the nutrients do I make the girls a bat guano tea lol. If you use bottled fertiliser like I do at times, use organic (it’s brown and smelly) opposed to synthetic which is clear and pretty much odourless. I started out using organic feed, but then used synthetics for years. Then I started flavour chasing and went back organic and it’s true what they say about taste. All the best, just remember to feed lightly.
Interesting. I use plant magic and follow their schedule. The silicon is very alkaline - so when you’re making the feed it usually is around ph8.5ish
 

ilovereggae

Well-Known Member
If you want to go water only, you need a supersoil.

check out https://buildasoil.com

they only ship to US/CA but they have a great blog, and all of their soil recipes are open source. They are the official vendor for Clackamas Coots ammnedment packs for making supersoil. I would recommend spending some time doing some research and go from there. You should be able to find everything locally.

You don't need to go fully living organic or no till, but it will be a good place to start.

I would start with a basic blend of equal parts peat moss, ewc/compost, and perlite. Then get whatever ammendments you can afford. The more goodies you add, then less nutes you will need to correct deficiencies later.
 
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