rkymtnman
Well-Known Member
good call on the Hoagland. just as a FYI it was developed for tomatoes in hydro for one specific week of bloom.Cannabis Cultivation and Science Podcast:
Link to Tad Hussey's YT channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvzklytMGuvSOa4hx0QxhUA/videos
He has great guests on, and great conversation about cannabis related research. (He's had Jeff Lowenfels [author of the "Teaming With" books on several times and there's some interesting discussion in those as well).
Ep. 30, Travis Higginbotham, @46:30 (51:01 mentions 'P' specifically. 12-24ppm.)
Ep. 43, Alison Justice (mentions 'P' specifically. 5-15ppm, references old cannabis study.)
Ep. 59, Paul Cockson (discusses various toxicities, deficiencies, and some published papers they've done. mentions they're currently running, what sounds like, experiments to investigate ranges of specific elements for cannabis.)
All worth listening in full (you can speed up the video/audio by 1.25 or whatever).
Paul Cockson refers to something called the Hoagland Solution, I'd definitely listen to this podcast, and look more into that solution/profile. It might be an interesting starting point for experimenting with nutrient profiles. Note the 'P' in this fertilizer mix, especially compare to everything else (it's 31ppm).:
Britanica and wiki, etc have more information as well.The Hoaglands Solution for Hydroponic Cultivation – Science in Hydroponics
scienceinhydroponics.com
(edit: added hoagland profile):
N 210 ppm
K 235 ppm
Ca 200 ppm
P 31 ppm
S 64 ppm
Mg 48 ppm
B 0.5 ppm
Fe 1 to 5 ppm
Mn 0.5 ppm
Zn 0.05 ppm
Cu 0.02 ppm
Mo 0.01 ppm
if you look at Steiner formula (i think a better ratio for cannabis IMO) P is 50.
Steiner's formula is here:
- N 170 ppm
- P 50 ppm
- K 320 ppm
- Ca 183 ppm
- Mg 50 ppm
- S 148 ppm
- B 1 to 2 ppm
- Fe 3 to 4 ppm
- Mn 1 to 2 ppm
- Zn 0.2 ppm
- Cu 0.1 to 0.5 ppm
- Mo 0.1 ppm