Neither the pedophilers? loli use it. my plant doesnt mind the gimmicks.
use to love advance nutes till i found out the owner is a kiddie fiddler now we do not stock any thing from advanced no moreAdvanced Nutrients Sensi Cal-Mag Xtra
I hope it is good but i dont know
Wonder how much cash that cost Big Mike?anyone watch weeds? i always thought it was funny how they promoted advanced nutrient like it was some magical potion
a fortune dude. that show had hype, I bet a ton of ppl modeled there shit on that.Wonder how much cash that cost Big Mike?
Are there others that do the same thing? Maybe even cheaper?
Experienced hydro growers do this a lot -- and buy 50lb bags of chemicals. You might find it perplexing to understand the nuances of how to mix (and where to buy manageable quantities of chemicals). He's adding more "lineups" but intends to provide "for dummies" information (and perhaps sell hobbyist quantities of chemicals). If it's not your thing now, keep an eye on it. In the near future it might be easier to orient yourself to.
I wouldn't rush to switch brands. There's no "pure" business out there. All the themed "lineups" are gimmicky. GH Flora 3-part is a classic hydro product. But, they were bought by Scotts (which is affiliated with Monsanto.). A lot of people use Dyna-Grow. My impression is that JR Peters (Jack's Hydro) is somewhere between the themed "lineups" and using bulk salts.
The General->Nutrients forum would be a good place to investigate those choices.
When I google for those products (like magnesium sulfate, or calcium nitrate) I see them referred to as "chemical compounds." Maybe "chemical fertilizer ingredients" would be a way to say it which could make everyone happy. "Inorganic compound" seems like the most accurate way to say it. But, most people don't talk like that.While what you said is correct, it seems to give the connotation that all chemicals are always dangerous, or, I guess that's how I interpreted it.
When I google for those products (like magnesium sulfate, or calcium nitrate) I see them referred to as "chemical compounds." Maybe "chemical fertilizer ingredients" would be a way to say it which could make everyone happy. "Inorganic compound" seems like the most accurate way to say it. But, most people don't talk like that.
That's always been a problem with bringing bulk-mixed fertilizer to the average grower. It turns into a whipping post to punish people for not fluently speaking chemistry. ("You can't do it if you can't speak the language. Figure it out for yourself. Harrumph!").
What you're doing is breaking down those barriers, making the info easily accessible. The "for dummies" presentation you're planning(?) would be the perfect place to educate about terminology and why some terms are preferable, etc. I.e., reach people at their level and orient them to where they need to be.
TBH, I don't really understand why the bottled blends aren't called fertilizers, because that's what they are.
It also doesn't bring with it the unintentional connotations surrounding the rest of chemistry.
The reason I don't call it "fertilizer" is because I think that word causes the average new grower to think of packaged, balanced, plant food (like MiracleGro, Espoma). I don't think they think of 50lb bags of (inorganic chemical compounds?) as "fertilizer" even though it's used with other compounds to make (or ingredients to) fertilizer. (I consider myself in that category too.).
"Fertilizer" also loses the distinction between organic sources of nutrients versus synthetic. That could be an equally-important distinction to some growers. "Chemicals" makes that clearer.
This would make a really good "tool tip" ("learn more" drill-down) of the "Dummies" orientation. I don't think people intentionally use "bad" words. I think "inorganic compounds" or "fertilizer salts?" is the most precise way to refer to these chemical ingredients. It's just that that's going to take some popular adoption of terms.
That's why I really like what you're doing. You can deprecate some of this tedious stuff to "learn more" links so people can drill deeper into the fine points of terminology. Those points could be linked to in discussions when people seem to be using the terms that are problematic.
I think all I'm saying is that in the modern day, to the layman, the word "chemical" has a bad connotation, so I want to avoid it for now.
Chemical compound
A chemical compound is a chemical substance consisting of two or more different chemically bonded chemical elements, with a fixed ratio determining the composition.
-- http://www.sciencedaily.com/terms/chemical_compound.htm