Looking for best fertilizer

Can anyone help me out with suggestions on what kind i should use and where i can get them from. Im looking for the best stuff and im doing outdoor. Im mostly just lookin for fertilizer for flowering time.

Thx
Rob
 

Theunion

Well-Known Member
I like to use a mix of molasses and tea, i usually use molasses torwards the middle of flowering to get the buds sweet :). Tea will help the soil which will in turn help your plants
 

+ WitchDoctor +

Well-Known Member
I use all of the above lol. I use Bio Canna Flores as my base with .5 tsp per gallon mollasses and I use a compost tea every other watering.
 

DustBomb

Well-Known Member
hey man it doesnt matter what u use just how u use them.... i use maxi series which are cheap dry nutes....

here's what i got from it.
 

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Vindicated

Well-Known Member
I did good using Advanced Nutrients Sensi Bloom A & B. Although for a lot cheaper, I also did really good using Kelloggs All-Purpose Organic Fertilizer. I found it at Home Depot. The listed NPK was 4-4-4 from what I remember. I ran both outside.
 

Rising Moon

Well-Known Member
Espoma makes good products, but...

I dont like the pre-mixed stuff, too many weird animal by-products for my taste.

But they make great rock dust based fertilizers, like greensand, rock phosphate and gypsum.
 

SupraSPL

Well-Known Member
If you have a growshop nearby you can order 50 lb bags of Organicare granular that is OMRi certified for about $60.

DERIVED FROM

Fish meal, sulfate of potash, alfalfa meal,
composted poultry litter, and seaweed
(Ascophyllum nodosum).
 

edyah

Well-Known Member
Jack's classic citrusfeed for start to finish.

Just got my Peters order in - Blossom Booster and Citrus FeED. FWIW, I think I found the Holy Grail for a complete, start to finish fertilizer. It's Jack's Classic Peters Citrus FeeD, a new 20-10-20 product. Compared to their popular Blossom Booster it has more Mg, 1% versus .50%; more Fe which is tripled chelated (EDTA, EDDHA, DTPA) to take into account any kind of soil chemistry, .15% versus .10%; 4.9% sulfur where the Blossom Booster has none, and more of an acidifying affect. 11 elements in all which I could recommend for coco and perhaps soil-less too. Caveat - more does not necessarily mean better. It's all about the balance. For example, this 20-10-20 will produce more yield versus someone hitting their plants with a low N, high K or P food.

Soil growers should check it out. What that formula suggests (based on my knowledge of cannabis nutrition and soil chemistry) is a greener plant (think Fe, S, Mg) with less stretch (low P) and an excellent NPK balance to support foliage, roots, and flowers.....a perfect one shot nutrition solution. No Weight Watchers program for this bendejo!

The N profile is 2% ammoniacal N, 3% nitrate N, 15% urea, which adds up to an acidifying affect.

Uncle Ben
 

AliCakes

Well-Known Member
A good topdressing of earthworm compost, dry molasses, and Azomite. I try to keep it simple. :)
 
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